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Jump to: General, Art, Business, Computing, Medicine, Miscellaneous, Religion, Science, Slang, Sports, Tech, Phrases
We found 26 dictionaries with English definitions that include the word aceldama:
Click on the first link on a line below to go directly to a page where "aceldama" is defined.
General (21 matching dictionaries)
- Aceldama, Aceldama: American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language [home, info]
- Aceldama: Collins English Dictionary [home, info]
- Aceldama: Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary, 11th Edition [home, info]
- Aceldama: Wordnik [home, info]
- Aceldama: Wiktionary [home, info]
- Aceldama: Webster's New World College Dictionary, 4th Ed. [home, info]
- Aceldama: Infoplease Dictionary [home, info]
- Aceldama: Dictionary.com [home, info]
- Aceldama: Online Etymology Dictionary [home, info]
- Aceldama: Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia [home, info]
- Aceldama: Online Plain Text English Dictionary [home, info]
- aceldama: Webster's Revised Unabridged, 1913 Edition [home, info]
- Aceldama: AllWords.com Multi-Lingual Dictionary [home, info]
- aceldama: Webster's 1828 Dictionary [home, info]
- aceldama: Hutchinson's Dictionary of Difficult Words [home, info]
- aceldama: Free Dictionary [home, info]
- aceldama: Hutchinson Dictionaries [home, info]
- aceldama: The Phrontistery - A Dictionary of Obscure Words [home, info]
- aceldama: Luciferous Logolepsy [home, info]
- Aceldama: Dictionary/thesaurus [home, info]
- aceldama: Worthless Word For The Day [home, info]
Computing (1 matching dictionary)
- Aceldama: Encyclopedia [home, info]
Miscellaneous (2 matching dictionaries)
- aceldama: A Word A Day [home, info]
- aceldama: Wordcraft Dictionary [home, info]
Religion (2 matching dictionaries)
- Aceldama: Easton Bible [home, info]
- Aceldama: Smith's Bible Dictionary [home, info]
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Quick definitions (aceldama)
(n.) The potter's field, said to have lain south of Jerusalem, purchased with the bribe which Judas took for betraying his Master, and therefore called the field of blood. Fig.: A field of bloodshed.
(This definition is from the 1913 Webster's Dictionary and may be outdated.)
▸ Word origin
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