English - Ojibwe Dictionary:
Synonyms of the word "Hell":
| Booligal |
Cehennem |
ghayy |
| Hay |
Hel |
Helheim |
| hells |
hells |
Hells Canyon |
| Jahanam |
Nar | |
The definition of word "Hell":
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1. place of punishment and torture where the wicked are sent after their death; misery, torment |
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2. Islam hell or Hell: Place of punishment after death: according to many religions, the place where the souls of people who are damned suffer eternal punishment after death Useful information: Jahanam: Most commonly understood to mean Hell. In fact, it is one of the levels of Hell. There are seven levels of Hellfire: Jaheem - the shallowest level of Hell. It is reserved for those who believed in Allah and His Messenger (S.A.W.), but who ignored His commands. Jahanam - a deeper level where the idol-worshippers are to be sent on the Day of Judgement. Sa'ir - is reserved for the worshippers of fire. Saqar - this is where those who did not believe in Allah will be sent on the Day of Judgement. Ladha - will be the home of the Jews., Hawiyah - will be the abode of the Christians., Hutama - the deepest level of Hellfire. This is where the religious hypocrites will spend eternity. The worst of Allah's creation are the Munafiqeen (Hypocrites), wether they be mankind or Jinn, for they outwardly appear to accept, but inwardly reject Allah and His Messenger (S.A.W.). |
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3. Islam Hell |
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4. Islam Jahannam |
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5. Islam The Hell |
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6. Islam Ghayy: a-Deception. b-Name of a pit in Hellfire. |
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7. anagram he'll |
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8. damn!, confound it! (used to express displeasure, irritation, etc.) |
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9. Gorge of the Snake River in the United States Forming part of the Idaho-Oregon boundary, it is 125 mi (200 km) long and for 40 mi (64 km) is more than a mile deep. A maximum depth of 7,900 ft (2,400 m) makes it the deepest gorge in North America. With its surrounding area of 662,000 acres (268,000 hectares), Hells Canyon was designated a national recreation area in 1975. |
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10. Abode of evildoers after death, or the state of existence of souls damned to punishment after death. Most ancient religions included the concept of a place that divided the good from the evil or the living from the dead (e.g., the gloomy subterranean realm of Hades in Greek religion, or the cold and dark underworld of Nilfheim or Hel in Norse mythology). The view that hell is the final dwelling place of the damned after a last judgment is held by Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The Jewish concept of Gehenna as an infernal region of punishment for the wicked was the basis for the Christian vision of hell as the fiery domain of Satan and his evil angels and a place of punishment for those who die without repenting of their sins. In Hinduism hell is only one stage in the career of the soul as it passes through the phases of reincarnation. The schools of Buddhism have varying conceptions of hell, usually entailing some kind of punishment or purgatory. In Jainism, hell is a purgatory in which sinners are tormented by demons until the evil of their lives has been exhausted. |
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11. the abode or state of being of evil spirits or souls that are damned to postmortem punishment. Derived from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning "to conceal, " or "to cover, " the term hell originally designated the torrid regions of the underworld, though in some religions the underworld is cold and dark. The concept of a state of being or place that separates the good from the evil or the living from the dead is found in most religions of the world. In religions of ancient and primitive peoples, the dwelling place of the dead as the destiny of the soul might be a gloomy subterranean realm or a distant island (e.g., the Greek Hades); a deep abyss in the lower world in which the souls of persons are punished (e.g., the Greek Tartarus); a dark region in the lower world in which both good and evil souls continue to exist as shades in constant thirst (e.g., the ancient Israelite Sheol); an underworld of cold and darkness (e.g., the Norse Niflheimr,; also called Hel); a celestial dwelling place in which the souls of the departed reside (as with the Pueblo Indians, who upon death become clouds and, thus, bringers of rain) or a nebulous existence in which the soul might eventually fade into nonexistence (as with the North American Indian hunting tribes). The view that hell is the final dwelling place of the damned after a Last Judgment is held by the Western prophetic religions: Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. In Zoroastrianism, a religion founded by the 6th-century-BC Iranian prophet and reformer Zoroaster, the soul at death waits three nights to be judged and on the fourth day goes to the Bridge of the Requiter, where his deeds in life are weighed. If the good outweighs the evil, the soul crosses the bridge, which becomes broad and goes to heaven; if the evil deeds are greater, the bridge becomes too narrow to cross and the soul falls into a freezing and ill-smelling hell to suffer torment and chastisement until the Resurrection. For those whose good and evil deeds are equal is reserved hamestagan ("the place of the mixed"), wherein such souls suffer from both heat and cold. Hamestagan corresponds to the Christian concept of purgatory. Judaism, as it developed from Hellenistic times, viewed hell in terms of Gehenna, an infernal region of punishment for the wicked. The Christian view of hell, based on Jewish concepts, regarded hell as the fiery domain of the devil and his evil angels, a place of eternal damnation for those who have lived a life of sin and who thereby deny God. Some early Christian thinkers, such as Origen of Alexandria and Gregory of Nyssa, questioned the eternity of hell and the literalistic view that hell was a place of a fiery afterlife. The majority of Christian thinkers, however, taught that hell is a state of punishment for those who die unrepentant of their sins. Some modern theologians have again questioned the literalistic view but still hold that hell is, at least, a state of separation of the wicked from the good. Islam, basing its concepts of hell, Jahannam, on Zoroastrianism, Judaism and Christianity, describes it as a huge crater of fire beneath a narrow bridge that all souls must pass over to go to paradise. The damned fall from the bridge and suffer torments, unless Allah (God) wills otherwise. In Hinduism, hell is only one stage in a career of the soul. Because all actions have consequences and because of reincarnation, the time spent in one or more of the 21 hells beneath the netherworld is not of ultimate significance. Eventually, the soul will return to the World (or Ultimate) Soul, even though it takes many life periods to do so. The Jaina hell (bhumis) is a place where demons torture sinners until any evil accumulated during their lives has been exhausted. In Buddhism, which denies the existence of both the individual and the World Soul, multiple hells correspond to karmavacara, the cosmic realm in which the five senses may be experienced in a variety of bodies and perceptions. In China, a primarily Buddhist conception of the realm of punishment and expiation after death was accepted and modified by Taoists. Popular notions of hell are based on fictional accounts of journeys to the netherworld, such as Travels in the West and the Life of Yeh Fei and on Buddhist scriptures describing the journeys of mercy taken there by the bodhisattva (one who is destined to be enlightened) Ti-ts'ang. At the moment of death, the dead are conducted by messengers to the god of walls and moats, Ch'eng Huang, who gives the dead a kind of preliminary hearing. The virtuous may go straight to one of the Buddhist paradises; to K'un-lun Mountain, the dwelling place of the Taoist immortals or to the tenth court of hell for immediate rebirth. After 49 days the sinners descend to the realm of hell, located at the base of Mt. Meru. The courts of the 10 kings are in the chief town, Feng-tu. The sinners undergo a fixed period of punishment in one hell or in a series of hells, which can be modified by the intercessions of the merciful Ti-ts'ang. In preparation for their rebirth the dead drink the broth of oblivion and climb onto the wheel of transmigration, which carries them to their next existence (According to other accounts the dead are thrown off the bridge of pain into a river that sweeps them off to their new destiny.) For the Japanese Buddhist view of hell, see Jigoku. |
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12. EX P R E S S I O N exclamation, (n) used to express anger or to give emphasis to an expression Oh hell, I've forgotten my key! What the hell was that noise? We haven't got a chance/hope in hell (= we have no chance/hope) of meeting such a tight deadline. (slang) It's a/one hell of a (also helluva) (= extremely) big decision to take. (slang) The house was in a/one hell of a (also helluva) (= a very big) mess. (slang) If you do something as confidently/quick/easily as hell, you do it very confidently/quickly/easily. (informal) If you get the hell out of a place, you leave it quickly. Let's get the hell out of here, before any shooting starts. (informal) If you do something like hell or if you feel something like hell, you do it or feel it very quickly, very hard, very strongly, etc.. We ran like hell. We worked like hell to finish the job. The tooth began to hurt like hell. (slang) Like hell is also used to mean certainly not. " Surely you feel quite rich by now?" " Like hell! I'm only making $10 000 a year. " (informal) If something or someone annoys, frightens, etc. the hell out of you, it makes you extremely annoyed or frightened. He jumped out from behind a wall and scared the hell out of her. (slang) To beat, knock, etc. the hell out of someone is to hit them with great force. There are two guys beating the hell out of each other in the street outside. (US informal) If you answer someone by saying the hell you do/are or the hell it does you are telling them you do not believe what they have said or will not allow them to do what they want. " I don't need your advice, I know what's good for me. " " The hell you do!" (informal) If you wish or hope to hell that something is true or that it will happen, you are saying how strongly you want it to be true or to happen. I hope to hell she hasn't missed that plane. (slang) If you say what the hell, you are expressing a feeling that something is suddenly not very important to you. I was supposed to be working this evening but what the hell - I'll see you in the pub in half an hour. (informal) If you are hell-bent on doing something, you are extremely determined to do it, without caring about risks or possible dangerous results. hell-bent on revenge/violence/causing trouble (informal) If you say hell's bells or (UK and ANZ also) hell's teeth, you are expressing your anger, surprise or fear. Hell's bells, man, can't you do anything right? |
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13. dinky doos |
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14. Norse In Norse mythology, Hel is the ruler of Helheim, the realm of the dead. She is the youngest child of the evil god Loki and the giantess Angrboda. She is usually described as a horrible hag, half alive and half dead, with a gloomy and grim expression. Her face and body are those of a living woman, but her thighs and legs are those of a corpse, mottled and moldering. The gods had abducted Hel and her brothers from Angrboda's hall. They cast her in the underworld, into which she distributes those who are send to her; the wicked and those who died of sickness or old age. Her hall in Helheim is called Eljudnir, home of the dead. Her manservant is Ganglati and her maidservant is Ganglot (which both can be translated as "tardy"). |
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15. Norse Helheim ("house of Hel") is one of the nine worlds of Norse mythology. It is ruled by Hel, the monstrous daughter of the trickster god Loki and his wife Angrboda. This cold, dark and misty abode of the dead is located in the world of Niflheim, on the lowest level of the Norse universe. No one can ever leave this place, because of the impassable river Gjoll that flows from the spring Hvergelmir and encircles Helheim. Once they enter Helheim, not even the gods can leave. Those who die of old age or disease, and those not killed in battle, go to Helheim while those who die bravely on the battlefield go to Valhalla. The entrance to Helheim is guarded by Garm, a monstrous hound, and Modgud. The giant Hraesvelg ("corpse eater") sits at the edge of the world, overlooking Helheim. In the form of an eagle with flapping wings he makes the wind blow. |
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16. In various mythologies and religions, the place of torment for the wicked after death. |
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17. religion one of two destinations for an individual after death in the Christian religion. Various groups within Christianity believe that a person goes there because of their beliefs or their actions, or some combination of beliefs and actions. In the early part of the 20th Century, Hell was generally believed to be a place of eternal punishment and torment. Lately, more groups describe it as a simple isolation from God. |
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18. hot and uncomfortable places; places to be avoided (popularised by the poem "Hay, Hell and Booligal" by AB (Banjo) Paterson; Hay and Booligal are towns in inland NSW) |
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19. extremely good; excellent: "hell collection" |
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20. exclamation of annoyance, disgust, etc. |
Please rate the definition of "Hell" which is the most useful for you. We have found the following ojibwe words and translations for "Hell":
|
English |
Ojibwe |
| 1. |
Hell |
maji-ishkodeng
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| 2. |
hell |
anaamakamig
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So, this is how you say "Hell" in ojibwe.
Expressions containing "Hell":
|
English |
Ojibwe |
| 1. |
fire: hell-~ |
maji-ishkode+n |
| 2. |
hell-diver |
zhingibenh+yag |
| 3. |
hell-diver |
zingibis+ag |
| 4. |
hell-diver |
zhingibis+ag |
| 5. |
hell-diver |
zhingibiz+ag |
| 6. |
hell-fire |
maji-ishkode+n |
| 7. |
hell: in ~ |
anaamakamigong |
| 8. |
hell: what a ~ish place! |
aakaa |
We hope that these expressions give you a good idea about how to use the word "Hell" in sentences. Up to now, 4,615,433 words and expressions have been searched, among 24,462 today. Tags: Hell, maji-ishkodeng, anaamakamig, English - Ojibwe Dictionary, English, Ojibwe, translation, online dictionary English | |