Moron may refer to: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary (a portmanteau of wiki and dictionary) is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 151 languages. ...
Connor Butcher, A common moron.
Moron (psychology), a psychology-related term for a person with a genetically determined mental age between 8 and 12
Moron (phage), an extra gene present in prophage genomes which do not have an explicit phage function
Moron was originally a scientific term, coined by psychologist Henry H. Goddard from a Greek word meaning foolish and used to describe a person with a genetically determined mental age between 8 and 12 on the Binet scale. ... This page is meant to contain information about people in the Book of Mormon that relatively little is known about, and thus unnecessary to have their own article. ... Bern Switzerland Temple Statue of Angel Moroni Moroni [mÉrounai], according to the Book of Mormon, was the last Nephite prophet and military commander who lived in North America in the late fourth and early fifth centuries. ... Rock Against Bush, Vol. ... WWIII follows the common KMFDM practice of naming albums, and many songs, with five-letter words. ... Mörön is the capital city of Hövsgöl aymag in northern Mongolia. ... There are a number of places named Morón: Morón, Argentina Morón, Cuba Morón, Spain Morón, Venezuela (Carabobo State) This is a disambiguation page â a navigational aid which lists pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
See also
Oxymoron, a figure of speech that combines two normally contradictory terms
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During these early years in Germany, and indeed throughout his life, Morone remained a conspicuous member of a little group of moderate and intellectual men who saw that in the deadly struggle with Lutheranism, the faults were not all on one side.
Morone went to Trent and waited until the handfull of representatives, who never met in public session, gradually dispersed, the council being formally prorogued 6 July, 1543.
It may be mentioned in conclusion that Morone had much to do with the founding of the important Collegium Germanicum in Rome, a work in which he was closely associated with St.
During these early years in Germany, and indeed throughout his life, Morone remained a conspicuous member of a little group of moderate and intellectual men who saw that in the deadly struggle with Lutheranism, the faults were not all on one side.
Morone went to Trent and waited until the handfull of representatives, who never met in public session, gradually dispersed, the council being formally prorogued 6 July, 1543.
In 1560 his successor Pius IV authorized a revision of the process against Morone, and as a result the imprisonment of the cardinal and the whole procedure against him were declared to be entirely without justification; the judgment also recorded in the most formal terms that not the least suspicion rested upon his orthodoxy.