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Definition of Sanctimonious
1. Adjective. Excessively or hypocritically pious. "A sickening sanctimonious smile"
Similar to: Pious
Derivative terms: Pharisee, Pharisee, Pietism, Pietism, Sanctimoniousness, Sanctimony
Definition of Sanctimonious
1. a. Possessing sanctimony; holy; sacred; saintly.
Definition of Sanctimonious
1. Adjective. Making a show of being morally better than others, especially hypocritically pious. ¹
2. Adjective. (archaic) Holy, devout. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sanctimonious
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sanctimonious
Literary usage of Sanctimonious
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. 'Hail and Farewell!' by George Moore (1912)
"think he lacks the piety of his sisters; he does not produce the word with the
admirable unction and sanctimonious grace of Maurice Healey, Ruth Lindsay, ..."
2. Three Years with Counterfeiters, Smug[g]lers, and Boodle Carriers: With by George Pickering Burnham (1875)
"THE Sanctimonious. " I do the wrong. The secret mischiefs that I set a-broach,
I lay unto the grevious charge of others, But then I sigh, and, ..."
3. General History of the Christian Religion and Church by August Neander, Joseph Torrey (1849)
"... one of the common Pseudo-cynics of the period, who were sanctimonious demagogues,—
attempted to stir up the people against the Christians ; and that he ..."
4. The Way of Saint James by Georgiana Goddard King (1920)
"... the extinguished candles and the sanctimonious old women and the pitiful old
men, the starched little girls and the bigger girls in white cotton gloves. ..."
5. Revelations of Prison Life: With an Enquiry Into Prison Discipline and by George Laval Chesterton (1856)
"... AND CHANGE FROM PITY TO SEVERITY THE GAROTTE SYSTEM INTRODUCED Sanctimonious
REPROBATES. THE commission contained the name of an Irish gentleman, ..."
6. Good Old Dorchester: A Narrative History of the Town, 1630-1893 by William Dana Orcutt (1891)
"Another writer calls him " pudding-faced, sanctimonious, and unfeeling." No one,
however, seems to question the ..."
7. 'Hail and Farewell!' by George Moore (1912)
"think he lacks the piety of his sisters; he does not produce the word with the
admirable unction and sanctimonious grace of Maurice Healey, Ruth Lindsay, ..."
8. Three Years with Counterfeiters, Smug[g]lers, and Boodle Carriers: With by George Pickering Burnham (1875)
"THE Sanctimonious. " I do the wrong. The secret mischiefs that I set a-broach,
I lay unto the grevious charge of others, But then I sigh, and, ..."
9. General History of the Christian Religion and Church by August Neander, Joseph Torrey (1849)
"... one of the common Pseudo-cynics of the period, who were sanctimonious demagogues,—
attempted to stir up the people against the Christians ; and that he ..."
10. The Way of Saint James by Georgiana Goddard King (1920)
"... the extinguished candles and the sanctimonious old women and the pitiful old
men, the starched little girls and the bigger girls in white cotton gloves. ..."
11. Revelations of Prison Life: With an Enquiry Into Prison Discipline and by George Laval Chesterton (1856)
"... AND CHANGE FROM PITY TO SEVERITY THE GAROTTE SYSTEM INTRODUCED Sanctimonious
REPROBATES. THE commission contained the name of an Irish gentleman, ..."
12. Good Old Dorchester: A Narrative History of the Town, 1630-1893 by William Dana Orcutt (1891)
"Another writer calls him " pudding-faced, sanctimonious, and unfeeling." No one,
however, seems to question the ..."