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religious person vs Nazarene

Nazarene vs religious person

religious person and Nazarene both are nouns.

religious person is not an adjective while Nazarene is an adjective.

Word NounAdjectiveVerbAdverb
religious person Yes No No No
Nazarene Yes Yes No No
As nouns, Nazarene is a hyponym of religious person; that is, Nazarene is a word with a more specific, narrower meaning than religious person:
  • religious person: a person who manifests devotion to a deity
  • Nazarene: a member of a group of Jews who (during the early history of the Christian Church) accepted Jesus as the Messiah; they accepted the Gospel According to Matthew but rejected the Epistles of St. Paul and continued to follow Jewish law and celebrate Jewish holidays; they were later declared heretic by the Church of Rome
religious person (noun) Nazarene (noun)
a person who manifests devotion to a deity an inhabitant of Nazareth
an early name for any Christian
a member of a group of Jews who (during the early history of the Christian Church) accepted Jesus as the Messiah; they accepted the Gospel According to Matthew but rejected the Epistles of St. Paul and continued to follow Jewish law and celebrate Jewish holidays; they were later declared heretic by the Church of Rome
religious person (adjective) Nazarene (adjective)
of or relating to the town of Nazareth or its inhabitants
of or relating to the Nazarenes or their religion
Difference between religious person and Nazarene

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