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View synonyms for secular

secular

[ sek-yuh-ler ]

adjective

  1. of or relating to worldly things or to things that are not regarded as religious, spiritual, or sacred; temporal:

    secular interests.

  2. not pertaining to or connected with religion ( sacred ):

    secular music.

  3. (of education, a school, etc.) concerned with nonreligious subjects.
  4. (of members of the clergy) not belonging to a religious order; not bound by monastic vows ( regular ).
  5. occurring or celebrated once in an age or century:

    the secular games of Rome.

  6. going on from age to age; continuing through long ages.


noun

  1. a layperson.
  2. one of the secular clergy.

secular

/ ˈsɛkjʊlə /

adjective

  1. of or relating to worldly as opposed to sacred things; temporal
  2. not concerned with or related to religion
  3. not within the control of the Church
  4. of an education, etc
    1. having no particular religious affinities
    2. not including compulsory religious studies or services
  5. (of clerics) not bound by religious vows to a monastic or other order
  6. occurring or appearing once in an age or century
  7. lasting for a long time
  8. astronomy occurring slowly over a long period of time

    the secular perturbation of a planet's orbit



noun

  1. a member of the secular clergy
  2. See layman
    another word for layman

secular

  1. Not concerned with religion or religious matters. Secular is the opposite of sacred .


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Notes

Secularization refers to the declining influence of religion and religious values within a given culture . means, loosely, a belief in human self-sufficiency.

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Derived Forms

  • ˈsecularly, adverb

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Other Words From

  • secu·lar·ly adverb
  • non·secu·lar adjective
  • pre·secu·lar adjective
  • super·secu·lar adjective
  • super·secu·lar·ly adverb
  • un·secu·lar adjective
  • un·secu·lar·ly adverb

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Word History and Origins

Origin of secular1

First recorded in 1250–1300; from Medieval Latin sēculāris, Late Latin saeculāris “worldly, temporal (opposed to eternal),” Latin: “of an age,” equivalent to Latin saecul(um) “long period, age” + -āris -ar 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of secular1

C13: from Old French seculer, from Late Latin saeculāris temporal, from Latin: concerning an age, from saeculum an age

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Example Sentences

For the last nine years, they have battled secular Baluch nationalists who would like to see an independent Baluchistan.

He advocates a secular regime with a total separation of religion form the government.

So here, for your Christmas Eve pleasure, are 20 of my favorites, 10 from the ecclesiastical division and 10 secular.

From the religious (‘The Holly and the Ivy’) to the secular (‘The Chipmunk Song’), my top 20.

A secular police state well practiced in suppressing internal challenges.

Besides these, twenty thousand Indians are under the care of secular priests—making a total of two hundred and five thousand.

Condition of the archbishopric of Manila in regard to the affairs of ecclesiastical and secular government.

In the port of Cavite, three leguas from Manila, there is a parochial church in charge of a beneficed secular priest.

Whenever the contrary is heard from anyone, he is corrected, admonished, and punished—by myself if he is a secular.

In it they established two religious for each subject, and they have twenty secular collegiates.

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sectorialsecular humanism