¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Neopagans
1. neopagan [n] - See also: neopagan
Lexicographical Neighbors of Neopagans
Literary usage of Neopagans
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A History of English Literature by William Vaughn Moody, Robert Morss Lovett (1918)
"persons of the nineties and nineteen hundreds, in distinction from the frivolous
neopagans or selfish materialists. This fact sufficiently accounts for ..."
2. French Traits: An Essay in Comparative Criticism by William Crary Brownell (1889)
"... subservient to manners ; whereas we consider these ends in themselves very
often, as the Talmud does study, and the English neopagans consider dress. ..."
3. French Traits: An Essay in Comparative Criticism by William Crary Brownell (1889)
"... subservient to manners ; -whereas we consider these ends in themselves very
often, as the Talmud does study, and the English neopagans consider dress. ..."
4. The Age of the Renascence: An Outline Sketch of the History of the Papacy by Paul Van Dyke (1897)
"... became the founder of the Roman Academy and the centre of the neopagans.
Under the patronage of Lorenzo, the grandson of Cosimo, the Florentine Academy, ..."
5. The Revival of Aristocracy by Oscar Levy (1906)
"You see, dear Englishmen, we neopagans are not as black as you imagine, and as
we paint ourselves sometimes. We could even be mistaken for Christians, ..."
6. Satan's Drummers by Sananda (1995)
"The Self-Blessing (Pagan) is one of a group of rituals conceived by a society of
neopagans known as the Pagan Way. The aim of the Pagan Way is to spread the ..."