¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Paganised
1. paganise [v] - See also: paganise
Lexicographical Neighbors of Paganised
Literary usage of Paganised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Contemporary Review (1867)
"... will carry us back first to the uncertainties and the despair of a paganised
philosophy, and then, iu due time, when all that elevates man has been ..."
2. Christian Schools and Scholars: Or, Sketches of Education from the Christian by Augusta Theodosia Drane (1910)
"... could be anticipated of a society made up of artists and professors, paganised
to the very core in its literature, its language, and its every maxim ? ..."
3. Studies in the History and Art of the Eastern Provinces of the Roman Empire by Sir William Mitchell Ramsay, Agnes Margaret Ramsay (1906)
"Such were the two forms of religion, with different social ideals and systems
founded on them, which fought for the soil of Anatolia —the paganised Church ..."
4. The Coming of Christ: Both Pre-millennial and Imminent by Isaac Massey Haldeman (1906)
"By the union of Ahab and Jezebel the professed people of God became paganised,
idolatrous. This epistle then teaches: 1. The professing church of Christ ..."
5. The Works of the Right Reverend William Warburton, D.D., Lord Bishop of by William Warburton, Richard Hurd (1811)
"Curse God, and die, is, it seems, the heroic exhortation both of Job's paganised
wife, and of our paganised citizen of Geneva ..."