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

  1. Of or pertaining to Nazareth or its people.
  2. Of or relating to the Church of the Nazarene.“Holiness Today is a Nazarene magazine.”

name

  1. 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

  1. A person from Nazareth.“While Jenin was starving under curfew, Nazarenes were only twenty minutes away, watching televised footage of their neighbours ‘in solidarity’.”
  2. A member of the Jewish sect of the Nazarenes.“He was formerly with the sect of the Pharisees, but now he is a Nazarene.”
  3. A Christian, a follower of Jesus.
  4. A member of the Church of the Nazarene.“I have been a Nazarene for several years; I joined the church in 1946.”