Immortal

From BiblePortal Wikipedia

Webster's Dictionary [1]

(1): ( a.) Not mortal; exempt from liability to die; undying; imperishable; lasting forever; having unlimited, or eternal, existance.

(2): ( a.) Connected with, or pertaining to immortability.

(3): ( a.) Destined to live in all ages of this world; abiding; exempt from oblivion; imperishable; as, immortal fame.

(4): ( a.) Great; excessive; grievous.

(5): ( n.) One who will never cease to be; one exempt from death, decay, or annihilation.

King James Dictionary [2]

IMMOR'TAL, a. L. immortalis. See Mortal.

1. Having no principle of alteration or corruption exempt from death having life or being that shall never end as an immortal soul.

To the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only wise God, be honor and glory forever.  1 Timothy 1

2. Never ending everlasting continual.

I have

Immortal longings in me.

3. Perpetual having unlimited existence.

A corporation is called an immortal being.

4. Destined to live in all the ages of this world imperishable as immortal fame.

So Homer is called the immortal bard.

Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary [3]

That which will endure to all eternity, as having in itself no principle of alteration or corruption. God is absolutely immortal,—he cannot die. Angels are immortal; but God, who made them, can terminate their being. Man is immortal in part, that is, in his spirit; but his body dies. Inferior creatures are not immortal; they die wholly. Thus the principle of immortality in differently communicated according to the will of him who can render any creature immortal, by prolonging its life; who can confer immortality on the body of man, together with his soul; and will do so at the resurrection. God only is absolutely perfect, and, therefore, absolutely immortal. See Soul .

Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary [4]

See Immortality

References