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neo-Catholic

[ ne-oh-kath-uh-lik, -kath-lik ]

adjective

  1. of or relating to those Anglicans who avowedly prefer the doctrines, rituals, etc., of the Roman Catholic Church to those of the Anglican communion.


noun

  1. a neo-Catholic person.
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Other Words From

  • ne·o-Ca·thol·i·cism [nee-oh-k, uh, -, thol, -, uh, -siz-, uh, m], noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of neo-Catholic1

First recorded in 1835–45
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Example Sentences

And Kovacs’ police officer partner Kristen Ortega has a neo-Catholic family that’s split over God’s view of resurrecting a loved one.

That scene, in which Kristin’s abuela drops by her neo-Catholic family’s holiday celebration and makes jokes about having to pee standing up, is funny and bizarre.

From Slate

Neo-Catholic, nē-ō-kath′o-lik, adj. pertaining to the short-lived school of liberal Catholicism that followed Lamennais, Lacordaire, and Montalembert about 1830: pertaining to a small party within the Anglican Church, who think they have outgrown Keble and Pusey and the great Caroline divines, and are more noisy than intelligent in their avowal of preference for Roman doctrine, ritual, and discipline.

The work of the Oxford Architectural Society, which had its birth in the Neo-Catholic movement, may prove more durable than that movement itself.

His experience in writing church music for a Roman Catholic service cannot be overlooked in regard to this and other works by Elgar, who came to be regarded as the representative of a Catholic or neo-Catholic style of religious music, for which an appreciative public was ready in England at the moment, owing to the recent developments in the more artistic and sensuous side of the religious movement.

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