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Definitions

dogmatize

[dawg-muh-tahyz, dog-] / ˈdɔg məˌtaɪz, ˈdɒg- /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The course of ileitis is so variable that doctors cannot dogmatize about the outcome of an individual case.

From Time Magazine Archive

The last part of the sentence discovers nothing so much as the writer's ignorance of the subject on which he presumes to dogmatize.

From Inspiration and Interpretation Seven Sermons Preached Before the University of Oxford by Burgon, John William

It is not a less, but a more, profound sense of the seriousness of the problem of moral character, that makes us hesitate to dogmatize concerning the future life.

From Theology and the Social Consciousness A Study of the Relations of the Social Consciousness to Theology (2nd ed.) by King, Henry Churchill

It does not seem to me good science or good sense to dogmatize about what this race will know, or what will be its tools of thought.

From The Book of Life by Sinclair, Upton

One is tempted to linger over that moment when Quixote ceased to experiment and began to dogmatize.

From The Gentle Reader by Crothers, Samuel McChord




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