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Definitions

casuistry

[kazh-oo-uh-stree] / ˈkæʒ u ə stri /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

This casuistry didn’t save him from a painful trial before a “denazification” court after the war.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 13, 2026

His decision for the court, handed down on Wednesday, is an incoherent mess of contradiction and casuistry, a travesty of legal writing that injects immense, gratuitous confusion into the law of equal protection.

From Slate • Jun. 18, 2025

Hill's casuistry is all too common in memoirs written by or for statesmen seeking to sanitize their own blunders and lies.

From Salon • May 8, 2021

It is, they argue, based on casuistry, which gets a bad rap but historically was the idea that the ethics of a situation are based on the specifics of the actual case.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 16, 2018

To defend its many puerilities, and even immoral tales, men have resorted to casuistry and dissimulation.

From How the Bible was Invented A Lecture Delivered Before the Independent Religious Society by Mangasarian, M. M. (Mangasar Mugurditch)




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