"Saber-toothed" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Having or characterized by large, blade-like teeth in the front part of the upper or lower jaw, typically found in extinct large predatory mammals during the Pleistocene epoch.
Here are 5 usage examples for the word "saber-toothed":
The saber-toothed tiger was the largest predator in the ice age period, stalking its prey through the frozen tundra.
The fossil of the saber-toothed tiger was discovered in a rocky crevice, its teeth and claws preserved for over 10,000 years.
During the last ice age, the saber-toothed tiger roamed the Americas, its roar echoing through the valleys and mountains.
The saber-toothed tiger's teeth were as long as a human arm, designed for killing large prey such as mammoths and giant bison.
Paleontologists have identified the remains of a saber-toothed tiger in a recent excavation in the Arctic Circle, shedding new light on the lives of these ancient predators.
The term "Sabean" can refer to several related things:<br><br>1. Sabaean: This refers to the Sabaean Kingdom, an ancient kingdom in the south of the Arabian Peninsula, which was a major power in the region from the 3rd millennium BC until the 3rd century BC, and later in the region of Hadhramaut in present-day Yemen, until the 6th century AD. The name is derived from the name of the Sabaeans, a southern Arabian tribe.<br>2. Sabaean Peninsula: This refers to a peninsula in northwestern Africa, comprising parts of Libya and Egypt.<br>3. South Arabian: This term (Sabaean being the name of one of the tribes) can also be used to refer to a group of languages spoken in the southern part of the Arabian Peninsula.<br>4. Sabaean stele: This refers to a Sabaean inscription, which can be stele (a stone slab bearing an inscription), created during the ancient Sabaean civilization.<br><br>A more literal interpretation of the term is not common.<br><br>Please provide more information or clarify what context you would like this term to be explained about to provide more accurate understanding.
Sabellianism is a Christological heresy in Christianity that was promoted by Sabellius, a theologian of the 3rd century AD. According to Sabellianism, the one God of the Trinity is sequentially incarnated in three persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This means that the doctrine suggests that God the Father, Jesus Christ the Son, and the Holy Spirit are three distinct stages or modes of one divine essence, rather than three coequal, coeternal persons distinguishable in substance and power.<br><br>The core of Sabellianism is that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit do not exist simultaneously, but rather each is a different manifestation of the one true God. Sabellianism emerged as a reaction against the teachings of the Arian heretics, who held that Jesus Christ was not coequal with the Father and the Holy Spirit. However, the exact mechanism of God's mode-switching was hardly outlined in early Sabellianism.<br><br>Back in his time, bishop Zephyrinus and his successor, Callistus (elected in 217), supported Sabellius's views, as well as other churches did, largely because they sought to clear themselves of what they saw as betrayal towards Christ by Arius.
SHEATHING (present participle of SABER) or <br><br>To DAMASCENE (verbal) <br><br>or to point or sharpen (scimitars or other long knives).