Allfather

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English[edit]

Proper noun[edit]

Allfather

  1. Alternative form of All-Father
    • 1878, Wilhelm Zimmermann, A Popular History of Germany:
      Allfather, the father of gods and men, the one God, is the one who, like the Hellenic Zeus, orders destiny according to his everlasting laws.

Noun[edit]

Allfather (plural Allfathers)

  1. Alternative form of All-Father
    • 1882, John Torrey Morse (Jr.), Henry Cabot Lodge, Robert Percival Porter, The International Review - Volume 12, page 574:
      We shall keep our God, but he will be an Allfather, and not an all-but-All-tormentor.
    • 1907, Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of London:
      The suggestion of a belief in an Allfather has however been challenged with much force by Mr. Hartland,” but has been adopted by Mrs. Parker in her work on the Euahlayi tribe.
    • 1985, Roger Pearson, Anthropological Glossary, page 7:
      The Indo-European belief in an 'Allfather' may have inspired the Christian concept of 'Our Father in Heaven'.

Anagrams[edit]