EDIFY


Meaning of EDIFY in English

ˈedəˌfī verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English edifien, edefien, from Middle French edifier, edefier, from Late Latin & Latin; Late Latin aedificare to instruct or improve spiritually, from Latin, to erect a house, construct, from aedes temple, house, building (probably originally “hearth”) + -ficare -fy; akin to Old English ād funeral pyre, fire, Old High German eit funeral pyre, fire, German dialect aitel, a kind of bright fish, Swedish id ide (fish), Latin aestas summer, Greek aithein to ignite, burn, Sanskrit inddhe he ignites

transitive verb

1. archaic

a. : build

a holy chapel edified — Edmund Spenser

edified fourteen hundred mosques — Edward Gibbon

b. : organize , establish

2. : to instruct and improve especially in moral and religious knowledge : enlighten , elevate , uplift

the object of these paintings … was to instruct and edify all who came into the church, even if they could not read — O. Elfrida Saunders

believe myself to be edified by the old liturgy — D.W.Brogan

intransitive verb

1. obsolete : grow , prosper

2.

a. obsolete : to profit spiritually : improve

b. archaic : to gain knowledge : learn

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.