Ten Commandments
English
Alternative forms
- ten commandments
Etymology
Calque of Biblical Hebrew עֲשֶׂרֶת הַדְּבָרִים ('aséret had'varím, “the ten items”), from Exodus 34:28 and elsewhere in the Bible.
Pronunciation
Audio (AU) (file)
Proper noun
Ten Commandments pl
- (religion) A particular list of religious and moral imperatives which, according to the Old Testament of the Bible or the Hebrew Bible, were twice given or dictated by God to Moses on Mount Sinai and inscribed on two stone tablets.
- (slang, dated) The ten fingernails, used by women when fighting.
- 1876, Evening Hours, page 629:
- She'd drink the gin fust and give him her ten commandments artervards, when she'd aggerawated him to try it on.
- 1881, William Henry Thomes, Running the Blockade: Or, U. S. Secret Service Adventures, page 148:
- […] once or twice, when he cut up bad, she appeared to him, and scratched his face with her ten commandments […]
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Translations
religious ten commandments
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See also
- Nine Commandments (“Ennealogue”)
- mortal sin
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