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Showing results for irreligious.
Definitions

irreligious

[ir-i-lij-uhs] / ˌɪr ɪˈlɪdʒ əs /


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.

"Not only is this a sacred day, the most sacred in the Jewish calendar, but it's also a time of mass gathering, and the time when the Jewish community, however religious or irreligious, gathers together."

From BBC • Oct. 2, 2025

But irreligious activists don’t just advocate for their specific causes; they have long pushed for other social justice issues like caste and gender equality.

From Seattle Times • Oct. 4, 2023

A Christmas Eve gathering might assemble irreligious friends, a meet-the-artist event at the shop might end up twice the size at her place.

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 10, 2022

Such self-conscious and deliberatively irreligious people are to be distinguished from the lackadaisically unaffiliated — often called "nones" — who simply don't identify with a religion.

From Salon • Aug. 21, 2021

Samuel James May, the famous abolitionist, was driven from the pulpit as irreligious, solely because of his attacks on slaveholding.3 Northern clergymen tried to induce “silver tongued” Wendell Philips to abandon his advocacy of abolition.

From Theological Essays by Bradlaugh, Charles