See also: -arian and arian

English edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Late Latin Arianus, from Arius + -ānus (-an: forming adjectives), from Ancient Greek Ἄρειος (Áreios), from ἄρειος (áreios, Arean, warlike), from Ἄρης (Árēs, Ares) + -ιος (-ios, -y: forming adjectives). Cf. Arean.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

Arian (plural Arians)

  1. (Christianity, historical) A supporter of the Cyrenaic monk Arius and his faction in the 4th-century Church.
  2. (Christianity) A believer of Arianism, particularly (historical) the official Arian churches lasting to the 7th century.
  3. (Christianity, inexact, usually derogatory) Synonym of unitarian, any Christian who denies the Trinity.
  4. (Christianity, inexact, derogatory, dated) Synonym of heretic, any Christian differing from any of the beliefs of the speaker.
Translations edit

Adjective edit

Arian (not comparable)

  1. (Christianity) Of or pertaining to Arius or Arianism.
Translations edit

Etymology 2 edit

From Aries +‎ -ian, from Latin aries (ram).

Noun edit

Arian (plural Arians)

  1. (astrology) Synonym of Aries, a person born under the influence of Aries.

Adjective edit

Arian (comparative more Arian, superlative most Arian)

  1. (astrology) Of or related to Aries, its nature, and its influence.
    • 1917, Herbert T. Waite, Compendium of Natal Astrology and Universal Ephemeris, page 39:
      The Arian nature is to create the idea...
Synonyms edit

Etymology 3 edit

Noun edit

Arian (plural Arians)

  1. Alternative spelling of Aryan

Etymology 4 edit

From Latin Arianus, from Aria + -anus (-an). Equivalent to Aria +‎ -an.

Adjective edit

Arian (not comparable)

  1. (chiefly historical) Of or related to Aria, the region around Herat in Afghanistan, particularly in the context of its ancient history.
Alternative forms edit

Anagrams edit