51Թ

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View synonyms for

inerrant

[ in-er-uhnt, -ur- ]

adjective

  1. free from error; infallible.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • ·۲· noun
  • ·۲Գ· adverb
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of inerrant1

1645–55; < Latin inerrant-, equivalent to in- in- 3 + errant-, stem of Բ present participle of to wander, err; -ant
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Besides, even an inerrant Bible offers more than one way to interpret women’s roles.

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Robinson was a devoutly Protestant academic who believed in the Bible’s inerrant truth.

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David Neiwert points out that far-right extremists from the Patriot movement to fringe Mormons like the Bundys treat "the original text of the Constitution as though it were Biblically inerrant."

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They embrace the theological red lines drawn in the 1980s, when conservatives wrested control of the denomination in defense of the inerrant truth of the Bible.

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My late father considered the Bible the inerrant 51Թ of God ghostwritten by a single privileged eyewitness from creation to revelation.

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