Mammon - Wikipedia The word Mammon comes into English from post-classical Latin mammona 'wealth', used most importantly in the Vulgate Bible (along with Tertullian's mammonas and pseudo-Jerome's mammon)
Mammona | Disney Wiki | Fandom Mammona is a character created by Guido Martina and Romano Scarpa, first appearing in the comic story "Menace of the Witch's Ruby" in 1953 (translated and collected by Fantagraphics in 2017) She is the empress of all witches and an adversary of Snow White
Definition, New Testament, Etymology, Meaning - Britannica The word is rendered mamōnas in Greek and mammona in Late Latin and was left untranslated in the Vulgate In English, mammon was used in the King James Version of the Bible and persisted as a word in other literature, though most modern Bibles variously use “wealth,” “riches,” or “gain ”
Mammona - Gamaverse Mammona is a first-person adventure game where you play as a thief in a medieval town ruled by two powerful clans After making a deal with the demon Mammona to become the richest man in town, you're cursed to give all stolen gold to beggars Now, your only hope is to steal some powerful artifacts from the clan estates and break the curse
Mammon | Encyclopedia. com MAMMON New Testament term for wealth, derived through the late-Latin mammona from the Greek μαμωνάς, a transliteration of the Aramaic māmônā’, "emphatic state," corresponding to the late-Hebrew māmôn, "financial gain, riches," probably a contraction of hypothetical ma'ămōn, "thing entrusted, deposit, security "
Mammon | Catholic Answers Encyclopedia Nothing definite can be adduced from the Fathers in support of this; most of their expressions which seem to favor it may be easily explained by the personification in Luke; e g “Didascalia”, “De solo Mammona cogitant, quorum Deus est sacculus”; similarly St Augustine, “Lucrum Punice Mammon dicitur” (Serm on Mt , ii); St Jerome