œcumenist

Noun

 * 1) * 2000, Gennady Barabtarlo, Cold fusion: aspects of the German cultural presence in Russia, pages 2–3 (Berghahn Books; ISBN 978‒1‒57181‒188‒2):
 * The very first one, by Heinrich W. Ludolf, a German from Erfurt and an œcumenist, was published in Latin at Oxford in 1696; it was a sensitive and astonishingly advanced description by a polyglot (with a missionary purpose in mind) of what was then a dialectus vulgaris, not suitable for any literary purpose excepting the law code.
 * 1) * 2000, Gennady Barabtarlo, Cold fusion: aspects of the German cultural presence in Russia, pages 2–3 (Berghahn Books; ISBN 978‒1‒57181‒188‒2):
 * The very first one, by Heinrich W. Ludolf, a German from Erfurt and an œcumenist, was published in Latin at Oxford in 1696; it was a sensitive and astonishingly advanced description by a polyglot (with a missionary purpose in mind) of what was then a dialectus vulgaris, not suitable for any literary purpose excepting the law code.
 * The very first one, by Heinrich W. Ludolf, a German from Erfurt and an œcumenist, was published in Latin at Oxford in 1696; it was a sensitive and astonishingly advanced description by a polyglot (with a missionary purpose in mind) of what was then a dialectus vulgaris, not suitable for any literary purpose excepting the law code.