Definitionadj. not conforming to some norm or socially approved pattern of behavior or thought
Last update: August 18, 2015
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Bertrand Russel was a nonconformist in his views. [Please select]
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VAVASOR POWELL (1617-1670), Welsh Nonconformist, was by birth a Radnorshire man and was educated at Jesus College, Oxford. [Please select]
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Brown was not shot merely "because he was a Nonconformist," nor was he shot by the hand of Claverhouse. [Please select]
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In the church, Roman, Anglican or Nonconformist: exemplars, the very reverend John Conmee S. [Please select]
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In loosely made broadcloth he gave the idea of a nonconformist minister--a Unitarian, judging from the intellectuality betrayed in his countenance. [Please select]
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He had always been a nonconformist in his heart; she bore lovingly the yoke of prescribed conduct. [Please select]
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Thomas Harrison, Berkeley's chaplain at Jamestown, who had used his influence with the governor to expel the Nonconformist ministers of New England. [Please select]
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He speaks with impatience of the nonconformist churches and with contempt of the Anglican church. [Please select]
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Not many people in Anglo-Catholic circles realise perhaps that to the educated nonconformist all this excitement about modernism seems strangely old-fashioned. [Please select]
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In 1841 a meeting in Manchester was held, at which were present seven hundred nonconformist ministers, so effectually had conversions been made among intelligent men. [Please select]
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