sectarian|sectarians in English
noun
[sec·tar·i·an || sek'terɪən /-'teər-]
member of a sect or faction; narrow-minded person, person with a limited perspective
Use "sectarian|sectarians" in a sentence
1. And sectarian politics will continue to breed sectarian violence.
2. Sectarian politics are ruining the country's economy.
3. Iraqi officials say public discord encourages sectarian violence.
4. The second is the exacerbation of sectarian divides.
5. Boehmist Receptions: Sectarian, Churchly, Esoteric, Literary, and Philosophical 5.6
6. The issues were, of course, ethnic sectarian violence.
7. This created an unprecedented degree of unity across the sectarian divide.
8. Indeed, it became increasingly torn apart by sectarian and ideological division.
9. Instead, Museveni says, parties make appeals along tribal or sectarian lines.
10. Religion is often linked to violence, including sectarian violence and terrorism.
11. The Six-Day War of 1967, strained sectarian relations in Lebanon.
12. He held the Confucianism and was not lindted by sectarian bias.
13. He was the fifth person to be killed in sectarian violence.
14. Setting out “to free philosophical radicalism from the reproach of sectarian Benthamism”, J
15. The sectarian violence of Northern Ireland is a different matter altogether.
16. Traditionally it was an area of peasant insurrectionists, schismatics, and sectarians whose acerbic style was reflected in Lenin's own.
17. The war has pulverized Iraqi society, dissolving it into an ethno-sectarian patchwork.
18. A spate of sectarian kidnappings and threats followed, some of which turned fatal.
19. Police said yesterday there appeared to be no sectarian motive for the killing.
20. The facades of neoclassic landmarks were blown to bits during the sectarian fighting.
21. Sectarians want to do Christians spiritual harm, and those bent on promoting divisions and sects will not inherit God’s Kingdom.
22. Church leaders hold crisis talks on wave of sectarian murders - see page
23. Then there is sectarian competition - over what is evangelical, too evangelical, not evangelical enough.
24. Scholar Abiel Abbot Livermore called this “an instance of the sectarian biases of the translators.”
25. By the end of the first century, sectarian influences were seen in the congregations.