English
Etymology
See trinity.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈtɹɪ.nɪ.ti/
- Hyphenation: Tri‧ni‧ty
- Rhymes: -ɪnɪti
- Homophone: trinity
Proper noun
Trinity
- (Christianity) In Christian belief, the three persons of the Godhead: the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
- Synonym: Holy Trinity
1836, Thomas Robbins, A Discourse on the Doctrine of the Trinity, page 17:He speaks distinctly of the Trinity of the godhead in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
1846, John Wilson, Scripture Proofs and Scriptural Illustrations of Unitarianism, page 149:From all eternity Jesus Christ existed, and Jesus Christ was with God the Father, the first person of the Trinity; and Jesus Christ was God the Son, the second person of the Trinity.
- A female given name from English used since the 1970s, from the religious term trinity, or translated from its long-established Spanish equivalent.
- A male given name.
- A small coastal town in Newfoundland, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
- A town in Alabama.
- A city in North Carolina.
- A city and town in Texas.
- (UK, Ireland, law, education) Ellipsis of Trinity term.
- (Cambridge University, informal) Ellipsis of Trinity College, Cambridge.
- (Oxford University, informal) Ellipsis of Trinity College, Oxford.
- The world's first nuclear explosion: a nuclear test on July 16, 1945, in New Mexico.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
Christianity: three persons of the Godhead
- Afrikaans: drie-eenheid
- Albanian: triadhë f, trinia f
- Arabic: اَلثَّالُوث m (aṯ-ṯālūṯ), اَلثَّالُوث الْأَقْدَس m (aṯ-ṯālūṯ al-ʔaqdas), تَثْلِيث (taṯlīṯ)
- Armenian: Երրորդություն (Errordutʻyun)
- Azerbaijani: təslis
- Basque: hirutasun
- Belarusian: тро́іца f (tróica), Тро́іца f (Tróica)
- Breton: Trinded (br) f, Treinded f
- Bulgarian: Тро́ица f (Tróica)
- Caló: Trimurtí f
- Catalan: trinitat
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 三位一體 / 三位一体 (saam1 wai6 jat1 tai2)
- Hokkien: 三位一體 / 三位一体 (Sam-ūi-it-thé)
- Mandarin: 三位一體 / 三位一体 (Sānwèiyītǐ)
- Czech: trojice (cs) f
- Danish: treenighed c
- Dutch: Drie-eenheid (nl) f, Drievuldigheid (nl) f
- Esperanto: Triunuo
- Estonian: kolmainsus (et)
- Faroese: tríeindin f
- Finnish: kolminaisuus (fi), kolmiyhteys (fi)
- French: Trinité (fr) f
- Galician: Trindade (gl) f
- Georgian: სამება (sameba)
- German: Dreieinigkeit (de) f, Dreifaltigkeit (de) f, Trinität (de) f
- Greek: Αγία Τριάδα (el) f (Agía Triáda)
- Ancient: τριάς f (triás)
- Hebrew: השילוש הקדוש (hashilúsh hakadósh)
- Hindi: त्रित्व (tritva)
- Hungarian: Szentháromság (hu)
- Icelandic: þrenning f
- Indonesian: Tritunggal (id)
- Ingrian: Troitsa
- Irish: Tríonóid f
- Italian: Trinità (it) f
- Japanese: 三位一体 (ja) (さんみいったい, sanmi-ittai)
- Kazakh: тәслис (täslis)
- Korean: 삼위일체(三位一體) (ko) (samwiilche)
- Latin: trīnitās f, Trīnitās f
- Latvian: trīsvienība f
- Lithuanian: trejybė f
- Macedonian: тројство n (trojstvo)
- Malayalam: ത്രിത്വം (ml) (tritvaṁ)
- Maltese: trinità mqaddsa f
- Maori: Tokotoru
- Middle English: trinite
- Norman: Trinn'té f
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: treenighet m or f
- Nynorsk: treeininga f
- Old English: þrines f
- Old Occitan: trinitat
- Ottoman Turkish: تثلیث
- Persian: تثلیث (fa) (taslis)
- Polish: Trójca Święta (pl) f
- Portuguese: tríade (pt) f, trindade (pt) f
- Romanian: Sfânta Treime (ro) f, treimea divină f, trinitate (ro) f
- Russian: тро́ица (ru) f (tróica), Тро́ица (ru) f (Tróica)
- Samoan: Tolu Tasi Paia
- Scots: treenity
- Scottish Gaelic: Trianaid f, Triùir an Aon f
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: тројство n
- Roman: trójstvo (sh) n
- Slovak: trojica f
- Slovene: trojica f
- Spanish: trinidad (es) f
- Swahili: utatu (sw)
- Swedish: treenighet (sv) c
- Tagalog: Santatlo, Trinidad
- Turkish: teslis (tr), üçleme (tr)
- Ukrainian: трі́йця f (tríjcja), Трі́йця (uk) f (Tríjcja)
- Vietnamese: Chúa Ba Ngôi, Tam Vị Nhất Thể
- Volapük: Kilät (vo)
- Wallisian: Tahitolu tapu
- Welsh: Trindod m
- West Frisian: trije-ienheid
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Further reading