protestant

listen to the pronunciation of protestant
English - Turkish
Protestan

Protestanlar azizleri kutsal saymazlar. - Protestants don't venerate saints.

Sen bir Katolik misin yoksa bir Protestan mısın? Ben bir ateistim. Evet, ama siz bir Katolik ateisti mi yoksa bir Protestan ateisti misiniz? - Are you Catholic or Protestant? I'm an atheist. Yes, but are you a Catholic atheist, or a Protestant atheist?

i., s. Protestan
(sıfat) protestan
Protestan mezhebi
{i} itiraz eden kimse
ProtestanlaraProtestantismProtestanlık
(isim) protestan
{s} itiraz eden
(Kanun) protesto eden
protest
{i} protesto

Bütün öğrenciler savaşı protesto ettiler. - All the students protested against the war.

O, protesto etmek için ağzını açmadı. - He didn't open his mouth to protest.

Protestant Work Ethic
Püritanlar(Protestanlar)ın dünyevi arzuları bastırmayı öğütleyen; çalışmayı yücelterek ibadet haline getiren etik anlayışı
protestant episcopal church
protestan kilisesi
protestant church
Protestan kilisesi
protestant church in germany
Almanya Protestan Kilisesi
protestant hymn book
Protestan ilahi kitap
protestant hymnbook
Protestan hymnbook
prot. , protestant
prot. , Protestan
protest
{f} karşı çıkmak
protest
{f} protesto et

Bütün öğrenciler savaşı protesto ettiler. - All the students protested against the war.

Amerikan işçileri protesto etmeye başladı. - American workers began to protest.

protest
gösteri

Göstericilerle polis arasında şiddetli çatışmalar patlak verdi. - Violent clashes broke out between the protesters and the police.

O, muhtemelen insanların gerçekten protesto yapmak yerine sadece boy göstermek için gösterilere gittiklerini kastediyordu. - He probably meant that people go to demonstrations just to show up instead of actually protesting.

protest
gösteri düzenlemek
protest
eylem yapmak
protest
itiraz etmek
protest
itiraz

İstifasını şirket politikasına itiraz ederek sundu. - He submitted his resignation in protest of the company's policy.

protest
karşı çıkma
protestantism
protestan mezhebi
protest
temin etmek
protest
bildirmek
protest
{f} protesto etmek

Tom protesto etmek için ağzını açtı. - Tom opened his mouth to protest.

Muhtemelen insanların gösterilere protesto etmek için değil, sadece kendilerini göstermek için gittiklerini demek istiyor. - He probably meant that people only go to demonstrations to show themselves and not to protest.

protest
{f} teminât vermek
protest
(Askeri) PROTESTO ETMEK, İTİRAZ ETMEK
protest
{i} (pro'test) protesto, karşı çıkma; itiraz
protest
{f} iddia etmek
protest
kuvvetle iddia etmek
protest
söyle/protesto et
protest
ciddi olarak taahhüt etmek
protest
{i} karşı gelme
protest
bir vergiyi istemeyerek ödediğine
protest
{f} protesto çekmek
protest
{i} ihtarname
protest
{f} reddetmek
protest
(Hukuk) kınama
protestantism
(isim) protestanlık
protestantism
{i} Protestanlık
English - English
A modern Christian denomination not belonging to the Catholic or Orthodox traditions
Someone who is a member of such a denomination
Any of several denominations of Christianity that separated from the Roman Catholic Church based on theological or political differences during the Reformation
of greater quality or merit
a christian who denies the authority of the pope and holds the right of special judgment
{n} one who protests against popery
{a} belonging to or like protestants
A Protestant is a Christian who belongs to the branch of the Christian church which separated from the Catholic church in the sixteenth century
Protestant means relating to Protestants or their churches. Most Protestant churches now have women ministers. a member of a part of the Christian church that separated from the Roman Catholic church in the 16th century. Protestant Reformation Episcopal Church Protestant Protestant ethic
Of or pertaining to the faith and practice of those Christians who reject the authority of the Roman Catholic Church; as, Protestant writers
A form of Christianity after the Reformation Protestant is used to describe the churches which do not belong to the Roman Catholic or Orthodox churches
Sunday Worship (nursery provided during services) 0900 Christian Contemporary Service Sunday School – 1030 (Sept-May) Gospel Service - 1330 Tuesday Retiree Bible Study 1800 Wednesday Women’s Bible Study 0900 Evening Bible Study 1800 Catholic Mass Saturday Mass - 1700 Sunday Mass – 1030 Weekday Mass Tue-Fri 1205 Holy Days - Call for information Catholic Religious Education Sunday 0900 (Sept-May) Sacrament of Reconciliation Saturday 1615 - 1645 or by appointment Baptisms & weddings Please call the chapel to schedule an appointment
any Christian who does not belong to the Roman Catholic or Orthodox Eastern Church
Strictly speaking, Protestants were those Roman Catholic clergy and lay people in and around the sixteenth century who sought to reform the Roman Catholic Church from within, but whose efforts were rewarded with excommunication The term also applies to the churches they founded after they were cast out General usage has expanded the term to include any western religious group that is not affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church
– A group within the Christian faith that holds more liberal ideas than the traditional Roman Catholic Church
{i} member of the Protestant sect of Christianity
the Protestant churches and denominations collectively
One who protests; originally applied to those who adhered to Luther, and protested against, or made a solemn declaration of dissent from, a decree of the Emperor Charles V
and the Diet of Spires, in 1529, against the Reformers, and appealed to a general council; now used in a popular sense to designate any Christian who does not belong to the Roman Catholic or the Greek Church
making a protest
A Christian who affirms the teachings of the Reformation: justification by faith alone, the priesthood of all believers, and the Bible as the only source of revealed truth
Any branch of the Christian church that broke away from the catholic church after the reformation Their motto was - Sola scriptura - the bible and the bible only The Eastern Orthodox church broke away several centuries earlier See Catholic See Ecumenism See The Reformation
Making a protest; protesting
Protestants are Christian but they do not agree with all of the main beliefs of Catholicism Instead
Christian who does not follow the Roman Catholic Church but whose faith is based on that of Luther or Calvin The name given to the Christian Churches which broke away from the Roman Catholic Church after 1517 The original three were the Lutheran, Anglican and Calvinist Churches, but several others developed from them - Baptists, Anabaptists, Episcopalians, Methodists, Unitarians and Plymouth Brethren, to name just a few
member of one of the new churches set up in the 1500s to replace the Catholic church
an adherent of Protestantism
an adherent of Protestantism of or relating to Protestants or Protestantism; "Protestant churches"; "a Protestant denomination
of or relating to Protestants or Protestantism; "Protestant churches"; "a Protestant denomination"
Christian belonging to a sect descending from those that seceded from the church of Rome at the time of the Reformation
{s} of the Protestant sect of Christianity, of the sect that separated from the Catholic Church during the Reformation
A member of a Reform Church
protestantical
Prot
Protestant Reich Church
A German Protestant Church that was associated with Naziism
Protestant ethic
Alternative form of Protestant work ethic
Protestant work ethic
A Calvinist value emphasizing the necessity of constant labor in a person's calling as a sign of personal salvation
Protestant Work Ethic
A concept in theology, sociology, economics and history which emphasizes hard work, frugality and diligence as a constant display of a person's salvation in the Christian faith, in contrast to the focus upon religious attendance, confession, and ceremonial sacrament in the Catholic tradition
Protestant Episcopal Church
The Episcopal Church. Descendant of the Church of England in the U.S. With the American Revolution, the Church of England was disestablished in the U.S. (1789), and American Anglicans renamed it the Protestant Episcopal Church. The church accepts both the Apostles' and Nicene Creeds and a modified version of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England. The General Convention is the highest ecclesiastical authority, and it is headed by a presiding bishop, which it elects. The Reformed Episcopal Church broke away from the main body in 1873. The church accepted the ordination of women in 1976
Protestant ethic
Value attached to hard work, thrift, and self-discipline under certain Protestant doctrines, particularly those of Calvinism. Max Weber, in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1904-05), held that the Protestant ethic was an important factor in the economic success of Protestant groups in the early stages of European capitalism, in that worldly success came to be interpreted as a sign of the individual's election to eternal salvation. Weber's thesis was variously criticized and expanded throughout the 20th century. See also Protestantism; Richard H. Tawney
protestant church
the Protestant churches and denominations collectively
protestant denomination
group of Protestant congregations
protest
to affirm something

I protest my innocence.

protest
A collective gesture of disapproval, sometimes violent
protest
{n} a solemn or formal declaration, as of dissenting member of the house of lords, of a master of a vessel, against seizure, of the holder of a note not duly paid
protestantism
{n} the religion of protestants
A Protestant
Prod
Protestantism
The Protestant (rather than the Roman Catholic or Orthodox) Christian religion
Protestantism
Collectively, the Protestant churches or the Protestants
Protestantism
Protestantism is the set of Christian beliefs that are held by Protestants. the spread of Protestantism. One of the three major branches of Christianity, originating in the 16th-century Reformation. The term applies to the beliefs of Christians who do not adhere to Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy. A variety of Protestant denominations grew out of the Reformation. The followers of Martin Luther established the evangelical churches of Germany and Scandinavia; John Calvin and more radical reformers such as Huldrych Zwingli founded Reformed churches in Switzerland, and Calvin's disciple John Knox established a church in Scotland (Presbyterianism). Another important branch of Protestantism, represented by the Church of England and Episcopal Church, had its origins in 16th-century England and is now the Protestant denomination closest to Roman Catholicism in theology and worship. The doctrines of the various Protestant denominations vary considerably, but all emphasize the supremacy of the Bible in matters of faith and order, justification by grace through faith and not through works, and the priesthood of all believers. In the early 21st century there were nearly 350 million Protestants in the world. See also Adventist, Baptist, Society of Friends, Mennonite, Methodism
Protestantism
protestancy
Protestants
plural of Protestant
White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
American who is of northern European heritage and belongs to the Protestant Church (considered to be the privileged class in the United States), WASP
protest
appeal
protest
An allegation made under rule 61 2 by a boat, a race committee or a protest committee that a boat has broken a rule
protest
to object to
protest
A declaration made by a party, before or while paying a tax, duty, or the like, demanded of him, which he deems illegal, denying the justice of the demand, and asserting his rights and claims, in order to show that the payment was not voluntary
protest
Something that is lodged by a team when it considers that another team or competitor has transgressed the rules
protest
a formal statement in writing by a notary public, under seal, that a certain bill of exchange or promissory note was on a certain day presented for payment, or acceptance, and that payment or acceptance was refused
protest
express opposition through action or words; "dissent to the laws of the country"
protest
{i} demonstration; objection; opposition; attestation, formal statement of disputation (Law)
protest
If you protest against something or about something, you say or show publicly that you object to it. In American English, you usually say that you protest it. Groups of women took to the streets to protest against the arrests The students were protesting at overcrowding in the university hostels They were protesting soaring prices He picked up the cat before Rosa could protest
protest
{f} demonstrate, remonstrate; assert, make a declaration; assert objection, declare opposition
protest
In a draft collection transaction, the formal legal process of registering that payment or acceptance of the draft has been demanded but the drawee has refused to pay or accept the draft
protest
Formal certification that a negotiable instrument was dishonored by a party liable for its payment
protest
What you call when one or more people get together to shout out a message they want the government and everyone else to hear
protest
a challenge to Customs Service decisions
protest
A complaint filed against a competitor, investigated by officials
protest
To call as a witness in affirming or denying, or to prove an affirmation; to appeal to
protest
A strong expression of disapproval made in writing by a competitor and addressed to the jury When dissatisfied with a penalty or the decision on a complaint made during the Event a competitor or a team has the right of protest GS 5 4 2 If dissatisfied with the Director's reply, a competitor has the right to make a protest to the Jury He shall, within one hour of the reply to his complaint, declare his intention to protest 5 5
protest
utter words of protest
protest
to make a strong objection
protest
express opposition through action or words; "dissent to the laws of the country
protest
To make a solemn declaration (often a written one) expressive of opposition; with against; as, he protest against your votes
protest
To affirm in a public or formal manner; to bear witness; to declare solemnly; to avow
protest
Legal procedure that may be administered by a notary public, evidencing non-payment or non-acceptance of a bill of exchange Useful in support of a subsequent civil action against the defaulter In a collection, the presenting bank may be instructed to arrange for this
protest
If you protest that something is the case, you insist that it is the case, when other people think that it may not be. When we tried to protest that Mo was beaten up they didn't believe us `I never said any of that to her,' he protested He has always protested his innocence
protest
In many countries it is a dishonored (not paid) draft, and has no standing in court unless a formally notarized statement of facts, known as a protest, is attached A formal certificate, attested by a notary public confirming the fact that a draft was not paid when it became due This step constitutes the basis for a formal and legal suit for non- payment
protest
ads the case may be, and protesting against them
protest
A formal statement of objection, dissent, or disapproval in regard to some act about to be done or already performed, such as an objection to an application, entry, claim, etc
protest
A statement in writing by any bidder or offeror on a particular procurement alleging that another bidder or offeror on such procurement is not a small business concern
protest
U S Customs Form 19 allows for a refund of an overpayment of duty if filed within 90 days of liquidation
protest
the act of protesting; a public (often organized) manifestation of dissent a formal and solemn declaration of objection; "they finished the game under protest to the league president"; "the senator rose to register his protest"; "the many protestations did not stay the execution"
protest
any complaint, objection, impugnation, rejection or other manifestation of disagreement presented in writing by a contractor or bidder during any phase of the procurement process either to the appropriate authority in the country where the procurement takes place or directly to the Bank
protest
Protests are done when an importer or broker disagrees witha Customs decision, typically issues involving classifications and values Protests must be filed within 90 days of liquidation of an entry
protest
the act of making a strong public expression of disagreement and disapproval; "he shouted his protests at the umpire"; "a shower of protest was heard from the rear of the hall"
protest
utter words of protest affirm or avow formally or solemnly; "The suspect protested his innocence"
protest
a formal and solemn declaration of objection; "they finished the game under protest to the league president"; "the senator rose to register his protest"; "the many protestations did not stay the execution"
protest
the act of protesting; a public (often organized) manifestation of dissent
protest
A formal objection, especially one by a group
protest
affirm or avow formally or solemnly; "The suspect protested his innocence"
protest
is a written, timely objection submitted by a protester to an FAA Screening Information Request (SIR) or contract award
protest
A protest is the act of saying or showing publicly that you object to something. The opposition now seems too weak to stage any serious protests against the government The unions called a two-hour strike in protest at the railway authority's announcement. a protest march
protest
A solemn declaration in writing, in due form, made by a notary public, usually under his notarial seal, on behalf of the holder of a bill or note, protesting against all parties liable for any loss or damage by the nonacceptance or nonpayment of the bill, or by the nonpayment of the note, as the case may be
protest
A solemn declaration of opinion, commonly a formal objection against some act; especially, a formal and solemn declaration, in writing, of dissent from the proceedings of a legislative body; as, the protest of lords in Parliament
protest
An allegation by a boat, a race committee or a protest committee that a boat has broken a rule
protest
  A written objection, before or during a race, against the course or its condition, disqualifications, timekeeping, another competitor or an official
protest
To make a solemn declaration or affirmation of; to proclaim; to display; as, to protest one's loyalty
protest
A declaration made by the master of a vessel before a notary, consul, or other authorized officer, upon his arrival in port after a disaster, stating the particulars of it, and showing that any damage or loss sustained was not owing to the fault of the vessel, her officers or crew, but to the perils of the sea, etc
protest
A formal declaration made by a person interested or concerned in some act about to be done, or already performed, whereby he expresses his dissent or disapproval, or affirms the act against his will The object of such a declaration is generally to save some right which would be lost to him if his implied assent could be made out, or to exonerate himself from some responsibility which would attach to him unless he expressly negatived his assent (Page 1387) TOP
protestantism
The quality or state of being protestant, especially against the Roman Catholic Church; the principles or religion of the Protestants
protestantism
{i} religious movement based on the teachings of Martin Luther, religious movement that separated from the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation (comprised of several different denominations)
protestantism
A term used in the aftermath of the Diet of Speyer (1529) to designate those who "protested" against the practices and beliefs of the Roman Catholic church Prior to 1529, such individuals and groups had referred to themselves as "evangelicals "
protestantism
Term applied to a variety of churches that broke with Roman Catholicism in the sixteenth century over issues such as the authoritative interpretation of scripture, church authority in general, and religious practice
protestantism
the theological system of any of the churches of western Christendom that separated from the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation
protestantism
referring to any Christian tradition or denomination that arose from, or developed as a later result of, the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, in which many clergy "protested" against certain abusive ecclesial practices and eventually broke away from the Roman Catholic Church
protestantism
This word has many overlapping definitions: A grouping of thousands of Christian denominations that trace their history back to the Protestant Reformation, and the split with the Roman Catholic church over the authority of the pope, the grounds for salvation, the status of the Bible, and the priesthood of all believers
the Protestant church
excludes the Roman Catholic or Orthodox Eastern Churches
protestant

    Hyphenation

    Prot·es·tant

    Turkish pronunciation

    prätıstınt

    Pronunciation

    /ˈprätəstənt/ /ˈprɑːtəstənt/

    Etymology

    [ 'prä-t&s-t&nt, ] (noun.) 1539. Middle French, from Latin protestant-, protestans, present participle of protestari.
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