¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Natures
1. nature [n] - See also: nature
Lexicographical Neighbors of Natures
Literary usage of Natures
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Macbeth by William Shakespeare, Horace Howard Furness (1903)
"MALONE : An anonymous correspondent thinks the meaning is: ' You stand in need
of the time or season of sleep, which all natures require.'—[BELL (p. ..."
2. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"In this "creed of the union" between .lohn ana Cyril, it is at least implied that
the two natures remain after the union (against Monophysitism), ..."
3. Institutes of the Christian Religion by Jean Calvin, John Allen (1816)
"The Union of the T-wo natures constituting the Person of the Mediator. it is said
that "the Word was made flesh," (a) this is not to be understood as if the ..."
4. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1909)
"Luther, thing that Christ does or suffers he refers back as being done and suffered
by God, but without an equal extension to both natures. ..."
5. An exposition of the Creed by John Pearson (1857)
"And thus this third Article, from the conjunction with the second, teacheth us
no less than the two natures really distinct in Christ incarnate. ..."
6. The History of American Sculpture by Lorado Taft (1903)
""The Two natures" (PL XI) was suggested by a line of one of Victor Hugo's ...
I feel Two natures struggling within me" is its full title — the artist's ..."
7. The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine by Roy J. Friedman Mark Twain Collection (Library of Congress) (1913)
"These two natures were startlingly different. One was to me hateful— Pera, ...
And between these two natures a gulf was fixed—the gulf of the Golden Horn. ..."