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pagan
[pey-guhn]
noun
(in historical contexts) one of a people or community observing a polytheistic religion, as the ancient Romans and Greeks.
a member of a religious, spiritual, or cultural community based on the worship of nature or the earth; a neopagan.
Sometimes Disparaging and Offensive.
a person who is not a Christian, Jew, or Muslim; a heathen.
an irreligious or hedonistic person.
an uncivilized or unenlightened person.
adjective
(in historical contexts) of or relating to pagans.
Sometimes Disparaging and Offensive.
relating to a religion, person, or culture that is not Christian, Jewish, or Muslim; heathen.
irreligious or hedonistic.
(of a person) uncivilized or unenlightened.
pagan
/ ˈɪɡə /
noun
a member of a group professing a polytheistic religion or any religion other than Christianity, Judaism, or Islam
a person without any religion; heathen
adjective
of or relating to pagans or their faith or worship
heathen; irreligious
Other Word Forms
- paganish adjective
- paganishly adverb
- nonpagan noun
- nonpaganish adjective
- pseudopagan adjective
- semipagan noun
- semipaganish adjective
- unpagan adjective
- ˈ貹Ծ adjective
- ˈ貹Իdz noun
- ˌ貹ˈپ adjective
- ˌ貹ˈپally adverb
- ˈ貹Ծ noun
- ˈ貹Ծ adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of pagan1
Word History and Origins
Origin of pagan1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
"It's got this fascinating iconography of a little figure with a long cross - explicitly Christian - over the valknut design, which has pagan roots."
“It goes back to pagan times when we’d get together for the harvest and feasting. Humans don’t really need much reason to get together and party, and this is our alternative to religion.”
Historians believe that Valentine's Day is rooted in the Roman love and fertility festival, Lupercalia, and was a move by Gelasius I to Christianise pagan traditions.
Oliver Stone needle-dropped it in “The Doors,” in a scene where Jim Morrison drinks blood in a pagan ritual.
She and other witnesses described the congregation as having strict views, including that mainstream healthcare should be shunned and that both Christmas and Easter were "pagan" or ungodly festivals.
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When To Use
The word pagan was once used to refer to a person who practiced a polytheistic religion—one based on belief in more than one god. This sense of the word was also used as an adjective to describe things related to such belief systems, as in pagan rituals. These senses are no longer in technical use (such as among religion scholars). Historically, pagan has also been used by followers of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam to refer any person who practices a different religion (especially one different than their own). This sense of the word is considered disparaging and offensive due to implying that such people and their beliefs are primitive and perhaps even evil. A more general use of pagan based on this sense is used to refer to a person considered irreligious, uncivilized, or hedonistic. The word heathen has traditionally been used in the same ways. Today, pagan can be used in a neutral way to refer to a person whose religious or spiritual beliefs center around nature or the earth and various deities associated with it. Such a person may also be called or identify as a neopagan. Example: As a Wiccan, I consider myself a pagan in the tradition of ancient belief systems.
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