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Definition of Body and soul
1. Adverb. With complete faith. "She was with him heart and soul"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Body And Soul
Literary usage of Body and soul
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1904)
"Body, and soul or spirit, represent a dualism of heterogeneous entities, ...
The way in which the body and soul are connected through the passions may be ..."
2. The Christian View of God and the World as Centring in the Incarnation by James Orr (1893)
"... j(jeal constitution that body and soul should ever be body ami soul separated.
The immortality man was to enjoy was an should be immortality in which ..."
3. The Physical and Metaphysical Works of Lord Bacon Including the Advancement by Francis Bacon, Joseph Devey (1904)
"Human Philosophy divided into the Doctrine of the Body and Soul. The Construction
of one General Science, including the Nature and State of Man. ..."
4. Systematic Theology: A Compendium and Commonplace-book Designed for the Use by Augustus Hopkins Strong (1907)
"He knows two, and only two, parts of his being — body and soul. ... These texte
imply that body and soul (or spirit) together constitute the whole man. ..."
5. Dictionary of the Apostolic Church by James Hastings, John Alexander Selbie, John Chisholm Lambert (1915)
"... man was formed under Hellenistic influences, and that he sets up a rigid
dualism between body and soul, matter and spirit (cf. Holtzmann, NT Theol. ii. ..."