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Definitions

clannish

[klan-ish] / ˈklæn ɪʃ /


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.

As each story revolves around the perils and power of racial or clannish identity, their sequels would naturally call for advances in inclusion of all kinds.

From Los Angeles Times • Aug. 29, 2022

The characters in this movie — as in a lot of Farr’s other scripts — are clannish, and fiercely protective of their own territory.

From The Verge • Mar. 29, 2019

Mary, already a widow and still in her teens, alights from France as an avatar of worldliness and modernity in a rugged, clannish country.

From New York Times • Dec. 6, 2018

Beatles people, even for how voluminous their number is, can be clannish.

From Salon • Jul. 7, 2018

In general, the Virginians were the chief beneficiaries of all the highly stylized histories, though, as Adams observed, “not a lad upon the Highlands is more clannish than every Virginian I have ever known.”

From "Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation" by Joseph J. Ellis