Existing eternally or without end; having the quality of lasting forever in a timeless way.
From Latin 'aeviternus' (eternal, without end), combining 'aevum' (age, lifetime) and 'aternus' (eternal). The term was used in medieval and Renaissance philosophy to describe timeless existence.
Medieval theologians used this word to distinguish between different kinds of 'forever'—for God it's aeviternal (timeless eternity), while for creatures it's just temporal duration. It's a philosophical precision from an age obsessed with categorizing existence!
Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.