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Showing results for doctrinaire.
Definitions

doctrinaire

[dok-truh-nair] / ˈdɒk trəˈnɛər /


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.

A fun game to play is to ask your most politically doctrinaire friends if there’s a policy they secretly support that cuts against their usual views.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 21, 2025

"The modernism that was around before the 1980s was very grey, restrictive, utilitarian and quite doctrinaire really," Farrell said.

From BBC • Sep. 29, 2025

After State Department officials raised the legal issue in one situation room meeting, Kissinger said scornfully: "We shouldn't decide this on such doctrinaire grounds."

From Salon • Dec. 10, 2023

While Stefanovich did find real commonality between Rachmaninoff and Ligeti, often in the cross rhythms and irregular counterpoint, much of what makes Rachmaninoff modern is simply our less doctrinaire ideas of modernity.

From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 14, 2023

Though he did not trouble himself about the doctrinaire side of socialism, he preached it constantly from the human side and from the artistic side.

From Browning and His Century by Clarke, Helen Archibald




Vocabulary lists containing doctrinaire