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traditionalism
[ truh-dish-uh-nl-iz-uhm ]
noun
- adherence to tradition as authority, especially in matters of religion.
- a system of philosophy according to which all knowledge of religious truth is derived from divine revelation and received by traditional instruction.
traditionalism
/ trəˈdɪʃənəˌlɪzəm /
noun
- the doctrine that all knowledge originates in divine revelation and is perpetuated by tradition
- adherence to tradition, esp in religion
Derived Forms
- traˈditionalist, nounadjective
- traˌditionalˈistic, adjective
Other Words From
- tra·dition·al·ist noun adjective
- tra·dition·al·istic adjective
- anti·tra·dition·al·ist noun adjective
- nontra·dition·al·ist noun adjective
- nontra·dition·al·istic adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of traditionalism1
Example Sentences
“Within its 1806 embodiment of the cocktail incarnate—spirit, sweetner, bitters, water—there is traditionalism,” Simonson writes.
In the musty traditionalism of the Marshalsea old John Dickens could easily remain optimistic.
And this streak of her father's ascetic traditionalism in Gratian always roused in him a wish to break it up.
Neither traditionalism nor the theological positivism of Duns Scotus sufficed for it; it sought to rationalize itself.
This is a fair sample of that lazy traditionalism which Christian opinion has been constrained to follow.
The motive of reverence for the soil, for the past, the motive of traditionalism, is beginning to be overheard.
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