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Showing results for latitudinarian. Search instead for solitudinarians.
Definitions

latitudinarian

[lat-i-tood-n-air-ee-uhn, -tyood-] / ˌlæt ɪˌtud nˈɛər i ən, -ˌtyud- /




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.

Was James Madison correct that it should dispose us against a latitudinarian interpretation of Congress’s powers?

From Washington Post • Mar. 17, 2017

There are a fair number of undramatised biographical passages, which make for bumpy reading, even if one takes a latitudinarian position about the role of information in novelistic prose.

From The Guardian • Jun. 8, 2012

Armchair analysts lolled under many latitudinarian banners�Jung, Adler, Reich, Stekel, Krafft-Ebing, Sacher-Masoch and even the Marquis de Sade.

From Time Magazine Archive

Not that that would have made any difference with papa, who looked at these matters with a very latitudinarian eye.

From A Search For A Secret (Vol 1 of 3) A Novel by Henty, G. A. (George Alfred)

According to the most latitudinarian notions, this was the extent of the remedy in the hands of Congress.

From Discussion on American Slavery by Breckinridge, Rev. Robert J.