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View synonyms for beatific

beatific

[bee-uh-tif-ik]

adjective

  1. bestowing bliss, blessings, happiness, or the like.

    beatific peace.

  2. blissful; saintly.

    a beatific smile.



beatific

/ ˌbiːəˈtɪfɪk /

adjective

  1. displaying great happiness, calmness, etc

    a beatific smile

  2. of, conferring, or relating to a state of celestial happiness

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • beatifically adverb
  • nonbeatific adjective
  • nonbeatifically adverb
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Word History and Origins

Origin of beatific1

First recorded in 1630–40; from French, from Late Latin beātificus “making happy,” equivalent to beāt(us) (past participle of beāre “to bless”) + -i- + -ficus; -ate 1, -i-, -fic
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Word History and Origins

Origin of beatific1

C17: from Late Latin beātificus , from Latin beātus , from beāre to bless + facere to make
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Pope John Paul II, who had ascended to the papacy in 1978, toured the world like a beatific rock star, preaching the gospel of this new sobriety in football stadiums across the country.

But the beatific, charismatic painter, who developed a rock-star following, was not all that he seemed.

When the crowd started chanting "lock him up" when Clinton mentioned Trump's felony convictions and she smiled beatifically the crowd roared —- she had earned that.

From Salon

As Chapman sang and played guitar, she looked satisfied, serene, almost beatific.

The movie’s most mercurial and multitasking figure, Carmen is also a woman of God, clad in beatific nuns’ robes and coiffed like Dreyer’s Joan of Arc, who means to exorcise the demon in their midst.

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