nazarene
/ˈnæzəɹiːn/
Etymology
In the sense "person from Nazareth", from Ancient Greek Ναζαρηνός (Nazarēnós, “of Nazareth”), an ethnonym of Ναζαρέθ (Nazaréth). In the sense "a member of a certain sect", from Ancient Greek Ναζωραῖος (Nazōraîos), which may or may not be related. For a list of theories as to the further etymology of this word, see the Wikipedia article on ‘Nazarene’.
adj
- Of or pertaining to Nazareth or its people.
- Of or relating to the Church of the Nazarene.“Holiness Today is a Nazarene magazine.”
name
- an epithet of Jesus Christ“I stand amazed in the presence / Of Jesus, the Nazarene, / And wonder how He could love me, / A sinner, condemend, unclean.”
noun
- A person from Nazareth.“While Jenin was starving under curfew, Nazarenes were only twenty minutes away, watching televised footage of their neighbours ‘in solidarity’.”
- A member of the Jewish sect of the Nazarenes.“He was formerly with the sect of the Pharisees, but now he is a Nazarene.”
- A Christian, a follower of Jesus.
- A member of the Church of the Nazarene.“I have been a Nazarene for several years; I joined the church in 1946.”