View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Abyssinian.

Abyssinian

Abyssinian meaning

Of or pertaining to Ethiopia or its inhabitants; Ethiopian. | Of or pertaining to the Abyssinian Church.

Example sentences (13)

Proceeds will benefit the Mount Sinai Missionary Baptist Church in Durham and as well as Abyssinian Baptist Church in New York City, where Talley's funeral was held.

The two men's return to office is not “resurrecting democracy,” said the Rev. Earle Fisher, a Memphis civil rights activist and senior pastor of Gifts of Abyssinian Baptist Church.

His latest project here will culminate with a free public performance with local Black artists outside the Abyssinian in May.

Mike Drage works at replacing floorboards in the Abyssinian Meeting House in Portland on Thursday.

Powell became pastor at the historic Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem.

Although Asra/Hutchinson is similar to the way Coleridge talks about the Abyssinian maid, Hutchinson was someone he met after writing "Kubla Khan".

For every Abyssinian, war is normal business, and military skills and rules of army life in the field enter in the flesh and blood of each of them, just as do the main principles of tactics.

From this new capital, Adal organised an effective army led by Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi (Ahmad "Gurey" or "Gran"; both meaning "the left-handed") that invaded the Abyssinian empire.

Italy's forces were far superior to the Abyssinian forces, especially in air power, and they were soon victorious.

Sultan Jamal continued to advance further into the Abyssinian heartland.

The Abyssinian Baptist Church has long been influential because of its large congregation, and recently wealthy on account of its extensive real estate holdings.

The Abyssinian maid is derived from many figures in Coleridge's life, including women who Coleridge admired in some way: Charlotte Brent, Catherine Clarkson, Mary Morgan, and Dorothy Wordsworth.

Their ancestry dates back from the beginning of the Italian colonization of Eritrea at the end of the 19th century, but only after the Second Italo-Abyssinian War of 1935 they settled in large numbers.