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Showing results for cultus. Search instead for stultus.
Synonyms

cultus

1 American  
[kuhl-tuhs] / ˈkʌl təs /

noun

plural

cultuses, culti
  1. a cult.


cultus 2 American  
[kuhl-tuhs] / ˈkʌl təs /

noun

plural

cultuses,

plural

cultus
  1. lingcod.


cultus British  
/ ˈkʌltəs /

noun

  1. RC Church another word for cult

"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

Etymology

Origin of cultus1

From Latin, dating back to 1630–40; cult

Origin of cultus2

1850–55, < Chinook Jargon kə́ltəs worthless, bad, < Lower Chinook kə́ltas in vain, only (but perhaps itself < Chinook Jargon)

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.

It opened in 1934 near the Ballard Locks, featuring Alaska stickleback, pipe fish, yellow-banded perch, blennies and cultus cod, according to HistoryLink.

From Seattle Times • Oct. 28, 2022

As Scientologists do battle with the government in Germany, they could point out that religion apparently comes from the Latin religare, or "to bind"; cult comes from the Latin cultus, meaning "worship."

From Time Magazine Archive

There was, in addition, another cultus in Greece, namely, that of Hecate with mysterious rays, the patron of sorcerers.

From Astronomical Myths Based on Flammarions's History of the Heavens by Blake, John F.

Something in the whole affair—the confidence and personal interest, and all—had taken her memory back to the days of that cultus corrie, when another man had shared with her scenes somewhat similar to this.

From Told In The Hills by Ryan, Marah Ellis

With the cultus of the Bennu at Heliopolis is connected the story of the phœnix.

From The History of Antiquity, Vol. I (of VI) by Duncker, Max