English language

How to pronounce secularist in English?

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Type Words
Type of advocate, advocator, exponent, proponent
Derivation secularism

Examples of secularist

secularist
Filmmaker Dundar, a well-known secularist, says he is shocked by the criticism.
From the time.com
Ijaz represents himself as a democrat, a secularist, and a friend of the West.
From the us.cnn.com
The experience of being a secularist in the US is clearly a radicalising one.
From the independent.co.uk
A secularist, and one of the few scientists with the interests of science at heart.
From the independent.co.uk
Catholics initially decried early secularist measures as unfair and abusive.
From the time.com
Was this just another round in the Islamist vs. secularist battle for Turkey's soul?
From the time.com
Petite physically if in no other sense, she was a feminist, a secularist, a leftist.
From the theatlantic.com
Taciturn and aloof, the new army chief is an old-style secularist, but with a twist.
From the economist.com
A secularist campaigner, Patel also co-founded Women Against Fundamentalism.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • An advocate of secularism; someone who believes that religion should be excluded from government and education
  • (secularism) a doctrine that rejects religion and religious considerations
  • (Secularists) Secularism is the concept that government or other entities should exist separately from religion and/or religious beliefs.
  • (secularism) A position that religious belief should not influence public and governmental decisions; The related political belief in the separation of church and state
  • ("Secularists") believe that laws and public institutions (for example, the education system) should be neutral as between alternative religions and beliefs. ...
  • (Secularism) (non-Aryan attitude)
  • (Secularism) Belief system that denies reality of God, religion and the supernatural hence it maintains that reality entails only this natural world. (W. Kaspar writes about it) (Lady Low-Ra)
  • (secularism) (n.) the view that religious outlooks, though perfectly entitled to exist and have their say, are not entitled to a bigger slice of the public pie than any other self-constituted, self-appointed, self-selected and self-serving civil society organization. --AC Grayling
  • (secularism) A neutral attitude, especially of the State, local government and public services, in matters relating to religion; non-religious rather than anti-religious.