COMMINATION


Meaning of COMMINATION in English

ˌkäməˈnāshən noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English comminacioun, from Middle French or Latin; Middle French commination, from Latin commination-, comminatio, from comminatus (past participle of comminari to threaten, from com- + minari to threaten) + -ion-, -io -ion — more at mount

1.

a. : an instance or the action of announcing, warning of, or threatening punishment or vengeance, especially divine punishment or vengeance

b. : denunciation : anathema

those thunderous comminations, that jeering and abuse which make Milton's prose such lively reading — Aldous Huxley

2. : a recital of God's anger and judgments against sinners read in the Church of England especially after the litany on Ash Wednesday ; also : the penitential office which contains this recital

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