(New Testament) the Apostle closely associated with St. Paul and traditionally assumed to be the author of the third Gospel.
1The Saint Luke would be sure to appeal to his friend Sainclair.
2But the visualisation of India's coral strand in Saint Luke's Square persisted.
3He asked them to keep a festival of herds on Saint Luke's Day.
4Didn't you know he's one of the principal stewards in Saint Luke's Square?
5Example; the two genealogies in Saint Matthew and Saint Luke.
6Another instance similar to this last is recorded by Saint Luke (chap.
7Such is the tongue in which I brought out Saint Luke's Gospel at Madrid.
8He was later pronounced dead at Saint Luke's Roosevelt Hospital.
9He pointed to the twenty-second chapter of Saint Luke's Gospel.
10I will presently to Saint Luke's; there, at the moated grange, resides this dejected Mariana.
11And this, as we contend, is precisely the inaccuracy which has produced the difficulty in Saint Luke.
12We commenced with Saint Luke: they rendering into Rommany the sentences which I delivered to them in Spanish.
13Whittenden of Saint Luke's told me.
14In the chapel is a piece of ancient tapestry: Saint Luke in his first profession is holding an urinal.
15He took the two ikons, of Saint Luke and of the Virgin, from his pocket and prayed to them.
16Yes, for the same Saint Luke paints the death of Saint Stephen as braver than that of Jesus Christ.