释义 |
Cocceian, a. and n.|kɒkˈsiːɪən| [f. proper name Cocceius.] Of or pertaining to the opinion of, or a follower of, John Cocceius, professor of divinity at Leyden (where he died 1669); he held that the whole Old Testament history was a foreshadowing of the history of Christ and his church. Hence Cocˈceianism.
1685R. Hamilton Let. in Faithful Contendings (1781) 204 Mr. Brackel was an opposer of the Cocceians. 1818Scott Hrt. Midl. xii, What think ye o'..Woodsetter? He's, I doubt, a Cocceian. 1860Trench Synon. N.T. Ser. i. (ed. 5) 137 Those who at that time opposed the Cocceian scheme. 1886Farrar Hist. Interpr. vii. 386 Cocceianism became proverbial for artificiality. |