Gnosticism

//ˈnɑstəsɪzəm//

Synonyms for "gnosticism" (6 found)

Ranked by relevance and common usage.

Closest matches (2)

Strong matches (1)

Related words (3)

Related word relations

OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.

5 relation types

More general

3 entries

derived

1 entries

derived from

1 entries

is a

2 entries

related to

8 entries

Translations

46 translations across 41 languages.

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Albanian

1 entries
  • gnosticizëm noun (Gnosticism)

Arabic

2 entries
  • عِرْفَانِيَّة noun (Gnosticism)
  • غُنُّوصِيَّة noun (Gnosticism)

Aragonese

1 entries
  • gnostizismo noun (Gnosticism)

Armenian

2 entries
  • գնոստիկություն noun (Gnosticism)
  • գնոստիցիզմ noun (Gnosticism)

Belarusian

1 entries
  • гнастыцызм noun (Gnosticism)

Bulgarian

1 entries
  • гностици́зъм noun (Gnosticism)

Catalan

1 entries
  • gnosticisme noun (Gnosticism)

Chinese Cantonese

1 entries
  • 諾斯底主義 /诺斯底主义 noun (Gnosticism)

Chinese Mandarin

1 entries
  • 諾斯底主義 /诺斯底主义 noun (Gnosticism)

Czech

2 entries
  • gnosticismus noun (Gnosticism)
  • gnóze noun (Gnosticism)

Danish

1 entries
  • gnosticisme noun (Gnosticism)

Dutch

1 entries
  • gnosticisme noun (Gnosticism)

Esperanto

1 entries
  • gnostikismo noun (Gnosticism)

Finnish

1 entries
  • gnostilaisuus noun (Gnosticism)

French

1 entries
  • gnosticisme noun (Gnosticism)

German

1 entries
  • Gnostizismus noun (Gnosticism)

Greek

1 entries
  • γνωστικισμός noun (Gnosticism)

Hebrew

1 entries
  • גְּנוֹסְטִיקָה noun (Gnosticism)

Hungarian

1 entries
  • gnoszticizmus noun (Gnosticism)

Interlingua

1 entries
  • gnosticismo noun (Gnosticism)

Italian

1 entries
  • gnosticismo noun (Gnosticism)

Japanese

1 entries
  • グノーシス主義 noun (Gnosticism)

Kazakh

1 entries
  • гностицизм noun (Gnosticism)

Korean

1 entries
  • 영지주의 noun (Gnosticism)

Latvian

1 entries
  • gnosticisms noun (Gnosticism)

Lithuanian

1 entries
  • gnosticizmas noun (Gnosticism)

Macedonian

1 entries
  • гностицизам noun (Gnosticism)

Norwegian

1 entries
  • gnostisisme noun (Gnosticism)

Persian

2 entries
  • غنوصی noun (Gnosticism)
  • گنوستیسیزم noun (Gnosticism)

Polish

1 entries
  • gnostycyzm noun (Gnosticism)

Portuguese

1 entries
  • gnosticismo noun (Gnosticism)

Romanian

1 entries
  • gnosticism noun (Gnosticism)

Russian

1 entries
  • гностици́зм noun (Gnosticism)

Serbo-Croatian

2 entries
  • gnosticìzam noun (Gnosticism)
  • гностицѝзам noun (Gnosticism)

Slovene

1 entries
  • gnosticizem noun (Gnosticism)

Spanish

1 entries
  • gnosticismo noun (Gnosticism)

Swedish

1 entries
  • gnosticism noun (Gnosticism)

Tagalog

1 entries
  • nostisismo noun (Gnosticism)

Turkish

1 entries
  • gnostisizm noun (Gnosticism)

Ukrainian

1 entries
  • гностицизм noun (Gnosticism)

Urdu

1 entries
  • معرفت noun (Gnosticism)

Sample sentences

4 total sentences available.

Tatoeba + Wiktionary

Gnosticism was a religious movement older than Christianity. There were both types of Christian and non-Christian Gnosticism because there was syncretism, or mixing. They believed that humans were trapped in their bodies and in this evil material world that was created by a cosmic disaster, by a malevolent deity who was not Christ. Christian Gnostics believed that Christ was one of the aeons or divine beings from the Pleroma, the Divine Realm, as described in the Apocryphon of John, part of the Nag Hammadi Library of Gnostic literature. Salvation was by esoteric knowledge, although ultimately self-knowledge. Gnostics believed in the dualism of the good spirit and evil matter. The material world was an evil place from where Gnostics had to escape. They believed that not all humans had the Divine Spark. The aeons emanated from the Ultimate God, the Monad in the Pleroma. The origins of Gnosticism are unclear today, but probably it came from Persia or further east. It had a lot of Greek influences. Today, after the discovery of the Nag Hammadi Library as leather-bound papyrus codices in a sealed jar in Egypt, in 1945, some people are trying to revive Gnosticism. "Gnōsis" is Greek for knowledge.

Source: tatoeba (10726707)

My mind about spirituality oscillates between Syncretism and Lojbanism. My Syncretism deals with Animisms as Daoism, Shintō, Native-world Animism, and so forth, as well as Buddhism and Hinduism, but I do not discount Xtian-type ideas from Jehovah's Witnesses, Gnosticism, and my birth religion, Roman Catholicism. My Lojbanism entails the study of Lojban and the practice in expressing spirituality in it, either by writing or making soliloquies.

Source: tatoeba (11579339)

Frankism seemingly drew influence from Gnosticism.

Source: tatoeba (12879516)

Another contemporary scholar of Gnosticism, C. G. Jung, has taken this notion of the twin ray and applied it to his own model of the contrasexual nature of the self.

Source: wiktionary

More for "gnosticism"

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.