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Definitions

dogmatize

[dawg-muh-tahyz, dog-] / ˈdɔg məˌtaɪz, ˈdɒg- /




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.

The course of ileitis is so variable that doctors cannot dogmatize about the outcome of an individual case.

From Time Magazine Archive

Speaking individually, I prefer rather to examine into the ways of Providence—i.e., of the Almighty, without framing any theory of right and wrong, than to dogmatize upon what He must intend by this or that.

From Ancient Faiths And Modern A Dissertation upon Worships, Legends and Divinities by Inman, Thomas

One is tempted to linger over that moment when Quixote ceased to experiment and began to dogmatize.

From The Gentle Reader by Crothers, Samuel McChord

"On the general moral question," says Mr. John Buchan, the well-known English writer on military subjects, "it is foolish to dogmatize."

From The Story of the Great War, Volume IV (of 8) Champagne, Artois, Grodno; Fall of Nish; Caucasus; Mesopotamia; Development of Air Strategy; United States and the War by Miller, Francis Trevelyan

On the constitutional argument, only the briefest comment will be attempted; and that without any intention to dogmatize upon a most complicated subject.

From The Settlement of Wage Disputes by Feis, Herbert