Of or relating to or supporting Romanism.
Sinônimos
Examples for "roman"
Examples for "roman"
1Poland; first Christianity in; Jews in; modern; Protestantism in; Roman Catholicism in
2In Palestine, however, a group of political zealots fiercely opposed Roman rule.
3Roman Catholicism: last rites; purgatory; Rousseau and; transubstantiation; vampires and; Voltaire and
4Apothegms, of kings and great commanders; Roman; Laconic or Spartan; in Homer.
5The Roman opened the trap-door in the ground in order to descend.
1Some considered him a papist, and a danger to the English Church.
2When the quarters of the last papist are nailed above York's gates?'
3He pointed it out upon a map some black-frocked papist had drawn.
4Beware, I say, of the papist Eve, the harlot and the Jezebel.
5No, sire, the Earl of Surrey is no traitor and no papist!
1Erema is popish and outlandish; one scarcely knows how to pronounce it.
2Make no mistake, I am resolved to do away with popish doctrine.
3Well, let them be called popish, for the Pope is their master.
4I don't approve of singing popish music, however beautiful it may be.
5Our Puritan ancestors despised it as a popish bacchanale decent people should avoid.
1No Romanist will hear with patience of any national restoration of Israel.
2He seems a nice kind of fellow; of course, a strong Romanist.
3You are a Romanist, but I am a Huguenot, and have read.
4The dogmas of the Romanist theology remained as they were before.
5Nor can the faith of a Romanist be a fixed and stable quantity.
1Red letters and embellished figures were sure marks of being papistical and diabolical.
2This papistical monster was born at Bury, in Suffolk, and partly educated at Cambridge.
3Let me hear no more papistical fables.
4For the mass, slow moving but apparently irresistible, of Spanish and papistical absolutism was gradually closing over Christendom.
5But everything contradicts this papistical defence.
1After the rebellion the Roman Catholics in the diocese were much persecuted.
2Roman Catholic enterprise halted in the eighteenth century and the Protestants began.
3This was a challenge to the job security of Roman Catholic priests.
4Bath was in tumult; a new Roman Catholic chapel there was burned.
5Identification is especially important to Catholics in the predominantly Roman Catholic country.
1We have been married according to the rites of the Romish Church.
2There is not a single ordained Romish priest among the Sioux Indians.
3He was the very man who brought the Romish Bill into Parliament.
4Their conversation, he often secretly assured himself, was peppered with Romish propaganda.
5There is a double-towered Romish cathedral of great size, not yet finished.
6Go into a Romish church, you shall find worshipers at every hour.
7He changed his boarding-place, also, to Duke Street, opposite the Romish chapel.
8The Romish doctrine of the Church began with Cyprian in the third century.
9Their language is Portuguese; and the religion they have is Romish.
10To be subject to the control of those ruthless tyrants, the Romish Priests.
11I should deplore our friend falling under the influence of the Romish priesthood.
12The Romish church received flattering eulogy from all the High Churchmen or Tractarians.
13Are the regular Romish clergy allowed; and have they any convents?
14Her parents were wealthy, and both very strict members of the Romish Church.
15To obviate this evil the Romish See must have recourse to extraordinary measures.
16The Pope replied as only a Romish priest could be expected to reply.