Explore Apol through 10+ example sentences from English. Ideal for language learners, writers and word enthusiasts.
Apol in a sentence
Related words
Using Apol
- In the example corpus, apol often appears in combinations such as: in apol, apol vi, ii apol.
Context around Apol
- Average sentence length in these examples: 28.2 words
- Position in the sentence: 2 start, 8 middle, 3 end
- Sentence types: 13 statements, 0 questions, 0 exclamations
Corpus analysis for Apol
- In this selection, "apol" usually appears in the middle of the sentence. The average example has 28.2 words, and this corpus slice is mostly made up of statements.
- Around the word, krishnamoorthi, god, predictions, lxii, responded and xxxiii stand out and add context to how "apol" is used.
- Recognizable usage signals include baptism 1 apol 61 4 and everything ii apol vi dial. That gives this page its own corpus information beyond isolated example sentences.
- By corpus frequency, "apol" sits close to words such as aanand, abcd and abdurrahman, which helps place it inside the broader word index.
Example types with apol
The same corpus examples are grouped by length and sentence type, making it easier to see the contexts in which the word appears:
Through the Word God has made everything (II Apol., vi; Dial., cxiv). (12 words)
We encounter this tradition of texts and exposition in its purest form in 1 Apol. 31–53. (17 words)
There is also a small tract in 1 Apol. 59–60 on borrowings of the philosophers from Moses, particularly Plato. (20 words)
The single passage where Justin uses both terms (1 Apol. 66.3) makes it clear that "memoirs of the apostles" and "gospels" are equivalent, and the use of the plural indicates Justin's awareness of more than one written gospel. (40 words)
It is in bondage to Satan (whose works it renounces in baptism), but has seeds of good (De anima, xli), and when awakened, it passes to health and at once calls upon God (Apol., xvii.) and is naturally Christian. (39 words)
The following example of an ethical teaching On Swearing Oaths in 1 Apol. 16:5 shows a combination of sayings material found in Matthew and the Epistle of James : :"Do not swear at all (Mt 5:34). (37 words)
Example sentences (13)
The Word is diffused through all humanity (I Apol., vi; II, viii; xiii); it was He who appeared to the patriarchs (I Apol., lxii; lxiii; Dial., lvi, lix, lx etc.).
In the letter to Krishnamoorthi, Apol responded to several of her questions about Kushner's conduct during the period when his family's real estate firm received the two loans.
Elsewhere, however, Justin, like St. Paul, calls Him the eldest Son, prototokos (I Apol., xxxiii; xlvi; lxiii; Dial., lxxxiv, lxxxv, cxxv).
It is in bondage to Satan (whose works it renounces in baptism), but has seeds of good (De anima, xli), and when awakened, it passes to health and at once calls upon God (Apol., xvii.) and is naturally Christian.
One possible reference to John is a saying that is quoted in the context of a description of Christian baptism (1 Apol. 61.4 – "Unless you are reborn, you cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven.").
Other sources Justin includes a tract on Greek mythology in 1 Apol. 54 and Dial. 69 which asserts that myths about various pagan deities are imitations of the prophecies about Christ in the Old Testament.
The following example of an ethical teaching On Swearing Oaths in 1 Apol. 16:5 shows a combination of sayings material found in Matthew and the Epistle of James : :"Do not swear at all (Mt 5:34).
The prophets were older than the Greek philosophers and their authority is accredited by the fulfilment of their predictions (Apol., xix-xx).
There is also a small tract in 1 Apol. 59–60 on borrowings of the philosophers from Moses, particularly Plato.
The single passage where Justin uses both terms (1 Apol. 66.3) makes it clear that "memoirs of the apostles" and "gospels" are equivalent, and the use of the plural indicates Justin's awareness of more than one written gospel.
The Word (Logos) is therefore the Son: much more, He alone may properly be called Son (II Apol., vi, 3); He is the monogenes, the unigenitus (Dial., cv).
Through the Word God has made everything (II Apol., vi; Dial., cxiv).
We encounter this tradition of texts and exposition in its purest form in 1 Apol. 31–53.
Common combinations with apol
These word pairs occur most frequently in English texts:
- in apol 4×
- apol vi 3×
- ii apol 2×