| 1. | an animal, esp. a nonhuman: the creatures of the woods and fields; a creature from outer space. |
| 2. | anything created, whether animate or inanimate. |
| 3. | person; human being: She is a charming creature. The driver of a bus is sometimes an irritable creature. |
| 4. | an animate being. |
| 5. | a person whose position or fortune is owed to someone or something and who continues under the control or influence of that person or thing: The cardinal was a creature of Louis XI. |
| 6. | Scot. and Older U.S. Use. intoxicating liquor, esp. whiskey (usually prec. by the): He drinks a bit of the creature before bedtime. |
Creature
denotes the whole creation in Rom. 8:39; Col. 1:15; Rev. 5:13; the whole human race in Mark 16:15; Rom. 8:19-22. The living creatures in Ezek. 10:15, 17, are imaginary beings, symbols of the Divine attributes and operations.