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Romist
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Noun
Romist (plural Romists)
- (archaic) An adherent of Romism.
- (archaic) A Roman Catholic.
- a. 1716, Robert South, a sermon on Titus 1. 1.
- the Romists hold fast the distinction of mortal and venial sins
- a. 1716, Robert South, a sermon on Titus 1. 1.
- (archaic, rare) A curialist.
- 1868 November, “The Irish church, considered in its missionary aspect: the past and the present”, in Church Missionary Intelligencer, volume IV (New Series), Church Missionary Society, page 340:
- The most tranquil period in the history of the country [Ireland] is that which marked the introduction of the Reformation. Had the antipathy been a religious one, it would have become, at such a period, intensely aggravated. It was remarkably otherwise. The most eminent of the Irish chiefs readily took the oath, and acknowledged the supremacy of the King; and, in the reign of Elizabeth, the whole country, priests and people, conformed to the reformed ritual. "The whole body of the Romist priests abandoned their connexion with Rome, and adopted the Protestant liturgy, and the entire mass of the population outwardly conformed to the ritual of the Established Church."
- (archaic) A Roman Catholic.
References
- “Romist”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
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