¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Laicised
1. laicise [v] - See also: laicise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Laicised
Literary usage of Laicised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Scholasticism by Joseph Rickaby (1908)
"Philosophy, like so many other things, has been laicised since then. Will Scholasticism
ever be laicised, or will it remain a property of the Seminary ? ..."
2. Ethics and Moral Science by Lucien Lévy-Bruhl (1905)
"... a laicised revelation, if we may say so ; so the idea of " natural ethics "
under a philosophical form remains an essentially religious conception. ..."
3. Saint Louis Medical and Surgical Journal (1888)
"Those hospitals and institutions in which these abuses had been most flagrant
were the first to be laicised, the act being done generally by special decree ..."
4. Rural Education in France by Cloudesley Shovell Henry Brereton, John Charles Medd (1902)
"I particularly recall the two lower classes at Beaumont (Sail-he), where the
school is a State one but not yet laicised. The inspector put the children ..."
5. Publications by Scottish History Society, Dorset Record Society (1907)
"... qualification the said properties have been [partially] laicised, treat them
as in all respects under the same conditions as the properties of laymen, ..."
6. The English Historical Review by Mandell Creighton, Justin Winsor, Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Reginald Lane Poole, John Goronwy Edwards (1903)
"And if he thus laicised on one topic, how shall we maintain his good faith on any ?
However, not Caesar only but all ancient literature is on trial. ..."
7. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"The choir now became more laicised and self-contained. It had grown out of, and
been shaped by liturgical needs. Its place was in the sanctuary, ..."