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Showing results for puritanical. Search instead for puritanska.
Definitions

puritanical

[pyoor-i-tan-i-kuhl] / ˌpyʊər ɪˈtæn ɪ kəl /


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 setting is still a Swiss alpine hamlet, but the villagers are all members of some puritanical sect and its sleepwalking heroine, Amina, has longings that transcend its limits.

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 8, 2025

The Jesus Army church recruited thousands of people to live in close-knit, puritanical communities in Northamptonshire, London and the Midlands.

From BBC • Jul. 28, 2025

New York and New England went on to become competing centers of power and ideology: one pluralistic and globally-minded; the other moralistic, monocultural and, well, puritanical.

From Salon • Mar. 15, 2025

It’s no surprise that someone in Elster’s shoes would push a case like this one, given the court’s skepticism of some of the Lanham Act’s more puritanical provisions.

From Slate • Nov. 1, 2023

The advice to omit needless words should not be confused with the puritanical edict that all writers must pare every sentence down to the shortest, leanest, most abstemious version possible.

From "The Sense of Style" by Steven Pinker




Vocabulary lists containing puritanical