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  1. Dictionary
    orenda
    /ɒˈrɛndə/

    noun

    • 1. invisible magic power believed by the Iroquois to pervade all natural objects as a spiritual energy.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Orenda definition: a supernatural force believed by the Iroquois Indians to be present, in varying degrees, in all objects or persons, and to be the spiritual force by which human accomplishment is attained or accounted for..

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › OrendaOrenda - Wikipedia

    Orenda / ˈɔːrɛndə / is the Haudenosaunee name for a certain spiritual energy inherent in people and their environment. It is an "extraordinary invisible power believed by the Iroquois Native Americans to pervade in varying degrees in all animate and inanimate natural objects as a transmissible spiritual energy capable of being ...

  4. The meaning of ORENDA is extraordinary invisible power believed by the Iroquois Indians to pervade in varying degrees all animate and inanimate natural objects as a transmissible spiritual energy capable of being exerted according to the will of its possessor. How to use orenda in a sentence.

  5. ORENDA definition: a supernatural force believed by the Iroquois people to be present, in varying degrees,... | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples.

  6. The Iroquoian term orenda, like mana, designates a power that is inherent in numerous objects of nature but that does not have essential personification or animistic elements. Orenda , however, is not a collective omnipotence.

  7. noun. A mystical power thought to pervade all things. Wiktionary. Origin of Orenda. Supposedly coined in 1902 by American ethnologist John Napoleon Brinton Hewitt using a Wyandot (Iroquoian) cognate to Mohawk orę́˙naʔ (“inherent power”). From Wiktionary. Find Similar Words. Find similar words to orenda using the buttons below.

  8. May 12, 2023 · A mystical power thought by the Iroquois to pervade all things. 1920, George Willis Cooke, The Social Evolution of Religion: In the Handbook of American Indians, Alice Fletcher describes the Iroquois conception of orenda as "a fictive force, principle, or magic power".

  9. The earliest known use of the noun orenda is in the 1900s. OED's earliest evidence for orenda is from 1902, in the writing of J. N. B. Hewitt. orenda is a borrowing from Iroquoian.

  10. Orenda is a word that means "spiritual energy" in the Huron (Wyandot) language, and has often been used to refer to gods and spirits in the Iroquois tribes as well.

  11. o•ren•da. Pronunciation: (ô-ren'du, ō-ren'-), [key] — n. a supernatural force believed by the Iroquois Indians to be present, in varying degrees, in all objects or persons, and to be the spiritual force by which human accomplishment is attained or accounted for.