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Dictionary Results For "mystery" [?]/[OPML]
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Wiktionary Articles [RSS] - [GNU, www.Wiktionary.org]

English

Pronunciation

  • An audio transcript can be found at en-us-mystery.ogg


Etymology

From mysterie < mysterium#Latin|mysterium < (musterion) “a mystery, a secret, a secret rite” < (mustēs) “initiated one” < “I initiate” < (muō) “I shut”

Noun

  1. Something secret or unexplainable; unknown.
  2. :The truth behind the events remains a mystery.
  3. Someone or thing with an obscure or puzzling nature.
  4. :That man is a mystery.
  5. A truth that needs divine revelation.
  6. A particular sequence of events in the life of Jesus|Christ.
  7. In the plural, in usage until the 18th century, the name given to different trades.


Synonyms


Related terms


Translations

References

Mysteries: http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1867-c1/ch15.htm#S9

See also

ang:mystery ar:mystery fr:mystery io:mystery id:mystery it:mystery hu:mystery simple:mystery fi:mystery ta:mystery te:mystery vi:mystery zh:mystery

GNU Project's publication of CIDE, the Collaborative International Dictionary of English Mystery \Mys"ter*y\, n.; pl. Mysteries. [OE. mistere, OF.
mestier, F. m['e]tier, L. ministerium. See Ministry.]
1. A trade; a handicraft; hence, any business with which one
is usually occupied.
[1913 Webster]

Fie upon him, he will discredit our mystery. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

And that which is the noblest mystery
Brings to reproach and common infamy. --Spenser.
[1913 Webster]

2. A dramatic representation of a Scriptural subject, often
some event in the life of Christ; a dramatic composition
of this character; as, the Chester Mysteries, consisting
of dramas acted by various craft associations in that city
in the early part of the 14th century.
[1913 Webster]

"Mystery plays," so called because acted by
craftsmen. --Skeat.
[1913 Webster] Mystic
GNU Project's publication of CIDE, the Collaborative International Dictionary of English Mystery \Mys"ter*y\ (m[i^]s"t[~e]r*[y^]), n.; pl. Mysteries
(m[i^]s"t[~e]r*[i^]z). [L. mysterium, Gr. mysth`rion, fr.
my`sths one initiated in mysteries; cf. myei^n to initiate
into the mysteries, fr. my`ein to shut the eyes. Cf. Mute,
a.]
1. A profound secret; something wholly unknown, or something
kept cautiously concealed, and therefore exciting
curiosity or wonder; something which has not been or can
not be explained; hence, specifically, that which is
beyond human comprehension.
[1913 Webster]

We speak the wisdom of God in a mystery. --1 Cor.
ii. 7.
[1913 Webster]

If God should please to reveal unto us this great
mystery of the Trinity, or some other mysteries in
our holy religion, we should not be able to
understand them, unless he would bestow on us some
new faculties of the mind. --Swift.
[1913 Webster]

2. A kind of secret religious celebration, to which none were
admitted except those who had been initiated by certain
preparatory ceremonies; -- usually plural; as, the
Eleusinian mysteries.
[1913 Webster]

3. pl. The consecrated elements in the eucharist.
[1913 Webster]

4. Anything artfully made difficult; an enigma.
[1913 Webster]
WordNet mystery
n 1: something that baffles understanding and cannot be
explained; "how it got out is a mystery"; "it remains
one of nature's secrets" [syn: enigma, secret, {closed
book}]
2: a story about a crime (usually murder) presented as a novel
or play or movie [syn: mystery story, whodunit]
Moby Dictionary
Chinese puzzle
, Grand Guignol , Marchen , Passion play , Tom show ,
Western
, Western story , Westerner , adventure story , allegory ,
ambiguity
, ambiguousness , anagoge , anagogics , anthroposophy ,
antimasque
, apologue , arcanum , art , audience success , awesomeness ,
baffle
, bafflement , baffling problem , ballet , bedtime story ,
beguilingness
, bewilderment , bomb , bother , brain twister ,
brain-teaser
, broadcast drama , burlesque show , business , cabala ,
cabalism
, career , career building , careerism , ceremonial , ceremony ,
charade
, classified information , cliff hanger , closet drama ,
comedy drama
, confidence , confidential communication , confoundment ,
confusion
, conundrum , craft , critical success , crossword puzzle ,
crux
, dark horse , daytime serial , detective novel , detective story ,
dialogue
, dilemma , discomposure , disconcert , disconcertedness ,
disconcertion
, disconcertment , disturbance , documentary drama ,
drama
, dramalogue , dramatic play , dramatic series , duodrama ,
duologue
, duty , eeriness , elfdom , embarrassment , enchantingness ,
enigma
, enigmatic question , enigmaticalness , enticingness ,
epic theater
, esoterica , esotericism , esoterics , esoterism ,
esotery
, experimental theater , extraordinariness , extravaganza ,
fable
, fabliau , faerie , failure , fairy tale , fantasy , fascination ,
fiction
, fix , floorer , flop , folk story , folktale , form ,
form of worship
, formality , formula , formulary , frontier ,
frontiers of knowledge
, function , game , gasser , gest , ghost story ,
giveaway
, glamorousness , guarded secret , handicraft , happening ,
hermetics
, hit , hit show , hocus-pocus , holy rite , horse opera ,
improvisational drama
, indefinability , indefiniteness ,
inexplicability
, inextricability , inscrutability , insolvability ,
institution
, jam , jigsaw puzzle , knot , knotty point , legend ,
legitimate drama
, lifework , line , line of business , line of work ,
liturgy
, love story , marvelousness , masque , matter of ignorance ,
melodrama
, metier , mind-boggler , minstrel show , miracle ,
miracle play
, miraculousness , mission , mode of worship , monodrama ,
monologue
, morality , morality play , mumbo jumbo , music drama ,
musical revue
, mysteriousness , mystery of mysteries , mystery play ,
mystery story
, mysticism , mystification , myth , mythology , mythos ,
n
, nebulousness , nonplus , number , numinousness , nursery tale ,
nut to crack
, obscurity , observance , occultism , occupation , office ,
opera
, order of worship , ordinance , otherworldliness , pageant ,
panel show
, pantomime , parable , pastoral , pastoral drama ,
perplexed question
, perplexity , personal matter , perturbation ,
phenomenalness
, pickle , piece , play , playlet , plight , poser ,
pother
, practice , predicament , prescribed form , preternaturalism ,
private matter
, privileged communication , privity , problem ,
problem play
, prodigiousness , profession , profound secret ,
psychodrama
, pursuit , puzzle , puzzlement , puzzler , quandary ,
question
, question mark , quiz show , racket , radio drama ,
remarkableness
, restricted information , review , revue , riddle ,
rite
, ritual , ritual observance , rituality , romance , sacrament ,
sacramental
, science fiction , scrape , sealed book , secrecy , secret ,
seductiveness
, sensational play , serial , service , shocker , show ,
sitcom
, situation comedy , sixty-four dollar question , sketch , skit ,
soap
, soap opera , sociodrama , solemnity , space fiction ,
space opera
, specialization , specialty , spectacle , stage play ,
stage show
, stew , sticker , straight drama , stumper , stupendousness ,
success
, superhumanity , supernaturalism , supernaturality ,
supernaturalness
, supernature , supernormalness , superphysicalness ,
supersensibleness
, supranaturalism , supranature , suspense drama ,
suspense story
, symbolics , symbolism , tableau , tableau vivant ,
talk show
, teleplay , television drama , television play ,
terra incognita
, the incalculable , the occult , the strange ,
the supernatural
, the supersensible , the unfamiliar ,
the unknowable
, the unknown , theater of cruelty , thriller ,
total theater
, tough proposition , trade , transcendentalism ,
unaccountableness
, unassuredness , undefinability , unearthliness ,
unexplainableness
, unexplored ground , unexplored territory ,
unknown quantity
, unworldliness , upset , vagueness , variety show ,
vaudeville
, vaudeville show , vehicle , vexed question , vocation ,
walk
, walk of life , whodunit , why , witchery , wonderfulness ,
wondrousness
, word-of-mouth success , work , work of fiction , x ,
yoga
, yogeeism , yogism , z


Mystery the calling of the Gentiles into the Christian Church, so designated (Eph. 1:9, 10; 3:8-11; Col. 1:25-27); a truth undiscoverable except by revelation, long hid, now made manifest. The resurrection of the dead (1 Cor. 15:51), and other doctrines which need to be explained but which cannot be fully understood by finite intelligence (Matt. 13:11; Rom. 11:25; 1 Cor. 13:2); the union between Christ and his people symbolized by the marriage union (Eph. 5:31, 32; comp. 6:19); the seven stars and the seven candlesticks (Rev. 1:20); and the woman clothed in scarlet (17:7), are also in this sense mysteries. The anti-Christian power working in his day is called by the apostle (2 Thess. 2:7) the "mystery of iniquity."
MYSTERY or MISTERY. This word is said to be derived from the French mestier now written metier, a trade. In law it signifies a trade, art, or occupation. 2 Inst. 668. 2. Masters frequently bind themselves in the indentures with their apprentices to teach them their art, trade, and mystery. Vide 2 Hawk. c. 23, s. 11.
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