It is pronounced puh-ROO-zhuh.
pronounce it as "eat" girl
"Pronounce it as 'chow'."
pronounce trencadis
You pronounce it as dih-muh-NOO-shun.
"La-hoat" is how you would pronounce "Lahote."
The cast of Parousia - 1975 includes: Tasos Palatzidis
The cast of Parousia - 1969 includes: Byron Tsaboulas as Narrator
The Second Coming
The cast of 5i parousia - 1995 includes: Sotiris Agapios as himself Nana Palaitsaki as Herself - Host
The Second Coming of Jesus. It hasn't happened yet, but most Christians believe it will.
The cast of Livios i i agalmatodis parousia tou perasmenou epous - 1976 includes: Irene Renton Theodoros Zamanis
The cast of Enas erotas horis parousia - 1993 includes: Marilena Andreou Veronika Argentzi Tania Kapsali as Eleonora Yorgos Moutsios Philippos Sofianos as Paris Eva Stylander
AnswerThe parousia, or return of Jesus at the end of time, is a prominent focus of 1 John.
Parousie is a literal French equivalent of the Greek word parousia (παρουσία). The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun -- which references "arrival, official visit, presence," especially in terms of the second advent of Jesus of Nazareth (7 - 2 B.C. - A.D. 30 - 33) -- will be "pa-roo-zee" in French.
Joost Holleman has written: 'Resurrection and Parousia' -- subject(s): Bible, Biblical teaching, Criticism, interpretation, Eschatology, Resurrection
There is no such word in Hebrew. For Jewish contexts, you could use the word arrival (הַגָּעָה) or appearance (הוֹפָעָה )
Absolutely Not! It's Greek for: Presence. And instead has everything to do with the Second coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.