dissenters in English

noun
1
a person who dissents.
You see, it wasn't until I came out as a dissenter against certain policies of the left-wing political establishment that I learned what it is like to be on the ‘wrong side’ of an issue.

Use "dissenters" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "dissenters" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "dissenters", or refer to the context using the word "dissenters" in the English Dictionary.

1. The Party does not tolerate dissenters in its ranks.

2. He attacked the indulgence shown to religious dissenters.

3. The Traoré regime repressed all dissenters until the late 1980s.

4. Chief Justice John Roberts was one of four dissenters.

5. It absorbed most of the dissenters from the dying Whig Party.

6. Chief Justice John Roberts was one of 4 decenters , he dissenters.

7. Nephite dissenters and some of the Lamanite youth join the Gadianton robbers

8. The Empress set up Infinity Monastery to use the Chaplain to eliminate dissenters.

9. And behold, they that were in the prison were Lamanites and Nephites who were dissenters.

10. Baptists originated among English dissenters of the 17th century, but have spread worldwide through emigration and missionary work

11. Dissenters were traitors to the state and those guilty of error enemies of society to be forcibly exiled.

12. Despite a few dissenters, paleontologists generally agree that dinosaurs were forerunners of modern birds, rather than reptiles.

13. Yet the aid package passed in an instinctively isolationist Congress with only a modest handful of dissenters.

14. There were even attempts by Anglican groups to prevent the Dissenters from enjoying the toleration they were offered after 16

15. When we maintain a mild temper even under provocation, dissenters are often moved to reassess their criticisms.

16. The corpses were later cut down and thrown into the gutter, where they were mocked by Italian dissenters.

17. A small meeting house or chapel for a religious assembly, esp of Nonconformists or Dissenters Collins Explanation of Conventicle

18. Autem Cackletub obsolete Any general meeting place of dissenters of a given denomination of the (Christian) church; a conventicle

19. 1766), Josiah was raised within a family of English Dissenters, he was the grandson of a Unitarian minister and was an active Unitarian.

20. Chief Justice John Roberts was one of four dissenters. He said the court provided no guidance about when recusal will be constitutionally required.

21. Charles attempted to introduce religious freedom for Catholics and Protestant dissenters with his 1672 Royal Declaration of Indulgence, but the English Parliament forced him to withdraw it.

22. The dissenters disputed each of these strands of the argument, and, while recognizing the Fourteenth Amendment Abrogation power, would have held that no such power existed under Article I

23. Abhorring dogma and religious mysticism, Rational Dissenters emphasised the rational analysis of the natural world and the Bible. Examples from Classical Literature One of his peculiarities was that of Abhorring a vacuum as much as nature herself.

24. 25 And they did commit murder and plunder; and then they would retreat back into the mountains, and into the wilderness and secret places, hiding themselves that they could not be discovered, receiving daily an addition to their numbers, inasmuch as there were dissenters that went forth unto them.

25. Catholics, according to McArthur, are “trapped” in a “system of superstitious and religious ritual.” But not to worry, there is a solution: the dissenters boldly defend the noble cause of “sheep stealing,” that is, the process of systematically seeking to proselytize Catholics, bringing them over, it is hoped, to the one true

26. This would again result in reserving protection for a predefined list of religious communities while not appropriately taking into account the right to freedom of religion or belief of those individuals or groups who do not, or do not seem to, fit into the setting of theologically accepted religions, such as members of other minorities, individual dissenters, minorities within minorities, atheists or agnostics, converts or people with unclear religious orientation.

27. It elaborates: “In Poland, for example, religion allied itself with the nation, and the church became a stubborn antagonist of the ruling party; in the GDR [former East Germany] the church provided free space for dissenters and allowed them the use of church buildings for organizational purposes; in Czechoslovakia, Christians and democrats met in prison, came to appreciate one another, and finally joined forces.”