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		Message board > Help!     
			
		 Help! 
		
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 S�lvia73
 
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							| Help! 
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							| Hi everyone!   I �m translating a text and I �ve come across the word "numenary". I can �t find it in any dictionary online and I �ve got no clue about its meaning. Can you help me?   Thanks in advance! |  22 Feb 2009      
					
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 Vana
 
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							| Just use Wikipedia and you will find the answer there. Good luck! |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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 S�lvia73
 
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							| Thanks Vana. I did and found nothing! |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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 Vana
 
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							| This is only the beginning of what I have found so... 
 
 NumeraryFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  
Jose Ortega y Gasset. Numerary professor of Psychology, Logic and Ethics at the Escuela Superior del Magisterio de Madrid Numerary is a civil designation for persons who are
incorporated in a fixed or permanent way to a society or group: regular
member of the working staff, permanent staff, or member, distinguished
from a supernumerary. The term "numerary" and its counterpart, "supernumerary,"
originated in Spanish and Latin American academy and government; it is
now also used in countries all over the world, such as France, the
U.S., England, Italy, etc. |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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 Zora
 
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							| As far as I can tell "numenary" doesn �t exist but "numerary" does...  Opus Dei has "numeraries and super numeraries"... here �s a wiki article: 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerary
 
 
 A numerary is basically somebody who has gone into into the faith, has taken a "vote" of celebicay and has agreed to live by the Opus Dei rules...
 
 
 
 
 |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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 BRAHIM S
 
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							| Then, just use my favourite tool, onelookdictionary, http://www.onelook.com/
 an exceptional site that permits to enlarge the search to many other dictionaries...
 I searched and it �s there in 9 dictionaries
 BRAHIM
 
 |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| Hi everyone   I think Silvia73 is asking about numenary and not numerary.  It �s very easy for us to not see that n in the word which can change the whole meaning.   I think that Zora is right, the word �numenary � may not commonly exist but if you google it you will find some entries.  The word numen  is in my dictionary.   It says "a deity, a divine power or spirit".  There actually is a wikipedia entry at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numen .  it �s quite interesting.  My favourite etymology site also says: 
numinous  "divine, spiritual," 1647, from L. numen (gen. numinis) "divine will," properly "divine approval expressed by nodding the head," from nuere "to nod" (cf. Gk. neuein "to nod").A numenary, if we break the word down into its root and suffix, is a person who practises numen maybe.  A numeni? One article talks about a numenary professor.  Related words that I found: numina, numinous, numeni   If there was a typographical error maybe it should be numerary and not numenary???   Now, after my googling efforts, when I see or hear this word I �ll be thinking of the Da Vinci Code!     |  22 Feb 2009     
					
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