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Agabus

American  
[ag-uh-buhs] / ˈæg ə bəs /

noun

  1. a Christian prophet who predicted a great famine.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The mouthpiece in King Jesus is one "Agabus the Decapolitan," writing at Alexandria near the end of the 1st Century A.D.

From Time Magazine Archive

A famine had afflicted the country,—probably that which Agabus had foretold.

From "Granny's Chapters" (on scriptural subjects) by Ross, Lady Mary

One of them, Agabus, under the influence of the Spirit, told that a severe famine would come all through that part of the world, and this famine came when Claudius was emperor.

From The Children's Bible by Sherman, Henry A.

Agabus will not have been the only Jud�an prophet who visited them, especially after the "great tribulation" which befell "those in Jud�a."

From The Making of the New Testament by Bacon, Benjamin Wisner

And Agabus tells of a great famine coming.

From Quiet Talks on the Crowned Christ of Revelation by Gordon, S. D. (Samuel Dickey)