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Meaning of metamorphist | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1

Definitions

  1. One who believes that the body of Christ was merged into God when he ascended.
  2. One who believes that some species were not part of the original creation but arose as the transformed souls of sinners.
  3. A proponent of one side of an early geological controversy in the late 19th and early 20th century who held that differences between various nonsedimentary rocks and minerals could be explained by metamorphic processes rather than the opposing viewpoint that these differences resulted from cooling of different types of magma.
    historical
  4. A metamorphic rock.
  5. One who undergoes transformation to take on various forms.
  6. One who believes in social transformation.

Examples

“I would you did but see what I have seene in these Conntries, as concerning the deadly hatreds, contentions & differensions of Luther has of-fspring: as of the Muntzerans, Anabaptists, Adamists, […] Metamorphists, Iudaists, Neutersacramentaries, Image-breakers, […], & of such like: al which have sucked their errours out of the dregges of Luthers doctrine, and yet forsooth will be found Protestants all.”
“Concerning the progeny of the transfigured sinners, Muslim scholars split into two groups, which Cook figuratively designated as "creationists" and "metamorphists.” The former held that swine and monkeys were created in the form they exist today, whereas the latter believed that their contemporary apes and swine were the progeny of the transfigured sinners.”
“On the other hand, there was the metamorphist position that some species were not created at all; instead they were brought into existence through metamorphosis in later epochs, after which they enjoyed a biological fitness no less than that of created species.”
“I am inclined to hold that there is a wide segment of truth embodied in the views of the metamorphists; but there seems to be also a segment of truth on the other side ; and so I must likewise hold with their antagonists, that there existed long periods in the history of the earth in which there obtained conditions of things entirely different from any which obtain now, —periods during which life, either animal or vegetable, could not have existed on our planet; and further, that the sedimentary rocks of this early age may have dreived, even in the forming, a constitution and texture which, in present circumstances, sedimentary rocks cannot receive.”
“A general laissez-faire sort of acceptance of the views of the more advanced metamorphists consoled some of us perhaps with the notion that it did not matter much whether tides had been greater agents of degradation of denudation and of transport in the remote ages of the Palaeozoic Period than in more recent times, since it was assumed that the oldest rocks we know were derived from other still older rocks.”
“It has very properly been objected to the extreme views held by metamorphists that no kind of fusion or rearrangement of any kind is competent to metamorphose an ordinary greywacke into a granite, for the simple reason that the most important constituent of one of the essential minerals of the granite, to wit, the patash of the felspars, did not orignally occur in the material acted upon.”
“In commenting on Mr. Ussher's views as they had been presented to the Society by his critic, Mr. Hudleston proceeded to say the Mr. Ussher was an ingenious metamorphist, who had evaded contradiction by assuming certain rocks not now existing to have been pre-Devonian, rocks obviously now beyond the disproof of chemical analysis.”
“As a metamorphist from the onset ( 1934-1935 ) I am afraid I might be partial.”
“Thus started the war between magmatists and metamorphists which, like that classical one between plutonists and neptunists, degenerated sometimes to personal quarrels.”
“Various grades of metamorphist up to staurolite-sillimanite rocks, are present in the formation.”
“[…] rock types ranging from the oldest archaean metamorphist to sub-recent and recent alluvium.”
“The sun was the grand Proteus, the universal metamorphist.”
“[…] metamorphist, able to disguise himself as somebody else; Hermes the concealer, who hides to make his traps work; Hermes Trismegistos, the thrice great;”
“The metamorphist becomes proficient in the needs and demands of the marketplace, struggling to make something happen virtually to the exclusion of concern for the needs of the people to be served or for the objectives of the development plan. As in all cases of pure naiveté, the metamorphist's transformation usually occurs despite the total absence of any factual knowledge of the developer's assets or percentage of profits.”
“Marx was a metamorphist, as well as a realist. He believed social relations pass through a series of material forms before becoming social relations once more.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

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