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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adherent
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Appeals for support of a new revolutionary movement, therefore, gained relatively few adherents.
▪ Both have their adherents, among writers and among readers.
▪ Even the slightest interface aspect could trigger a heated debate, with adherents of opposing solutions arguing with near-Jesuitical intensity.
▪ For Suzuki adherents, music is an inclination innate in all of us.
▪ He was beheaded by them, and replaced by an adherent of the Lords Ordainers.
▪ Nor could we expect the adherents of each approach to treat any anomaly as a reason for rejecting it.
▪ The doctrine convinced its adherents that natural selection worked.
▪ This phrase is a clue, becoming a means whereby adherents of the same movement can be identified.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Adherent

Adherent \Ad*her"ent\, n.

  1. One who adheres; one who adheres; one who follows a leader, party, or profession; a follower, or partisan; a believer in a particular faith or church.

  2. That which adheres; an appendage. [R.]
    --Milton.

    Syn: Follower; partisan; upholder; disciple; supporter; dependent; ally; backer.

Adherent

Adherent \Ad*her"ent\, a. [L. adhaerens, -entis, p. pr.: cf. F. adh['e]rent.]

  1. Sticking; clinging; adhering.
    --Pope.

  2. Attached as an attribute or circumstance.

  3. (Bot.) Congenitally united with an organ of another kind, as calyx with ovary, or stamens with petals.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
adherent

late 14c., from Old French adherent or directly from Latin adhaerentem (nominative adhaerens), present participle of adhaerere "stick to," from ad- "to" (see ad-) + haerere "to stick" (see hesitation).

adherent

"follower, associate, supporter," early 15c., from Old French adherent or directly from Latin adhaerentem (see adherent (adj.)). Meaning "adhesive substance" is from 1912.

Wiktionary
adherent

a. 1 adhesive, sticking to something. 2 Having the quality of clinging or sticking fast to something. 3 (context botany English) Attaching or pressing against a different organ. alt. 1 adhesive, sticking to something. 2 Having the quality of clinging or sticking fast to something. 3 (context botany English) Attaching or pressing against a different organ. n. A person who has membership in some group, association or religion.

WordNet
adherent
  1. adj. sticking fast

  2. n. someone who believes and helps to spread the doctrine of another [syn: disciple]

Usage examples of "adherent".

Lenfant has abridged and compared the original narratives of the adherents of Urban and Clement, of the Italians and Germans, the French and Spaniards.

Pope Gregory the Great, in the sixth century, either borrowing some of the more objectionable features of the purgatory doctrine previously held by the heathen, or else devising the same things himself from a perception of the striking adaptedness of such notions to secure an enviable power to the Church, constructed, established, and gave working efficiency to the dogmatic scheme of purgatory ever since firmly defended by the papal adherents as an integral part of the Roman Catholic system.

Though the ground was covered with snow, and the weather intensely cold, he travelled with such diligence, that the term prescribed by the proclamation was but one day elapsed when he reached the place, and addressed himself to sir John Campbell, sheriff of the county, who, in consideration of his disappointment at Fort-William, was prevailed upon to administer the oaths to him and his adherents.

Whereas Caesar for all his illustrious ancestry did not have the money to buy adherents or votes.

This was a measure designed to root out the Catholic heresy of Jansenism, which took a much more austere view of salvation than the acceptable norm, and which had adherents at high levels of the Parlements, especially in Paris.

For this reason, the adherents of the positive school of criminology feel the most sincere reverence for the classic school of criminology.

Eddy, was well adapted for its purpose, and read by a professional elocutionist, not an adherent of the order, Mrs.

In a few days after, he espoused the Princess Catharine: he carried his father-in-law to Paris, and put himself in possession of that capital: he obtained from the parliament and the three estates a ratification of the treaty of Troye: he supported the duke of Burgundy in procuring a sentence against the murderers of his father: and he immediately turned his arms with success against the adherents of the dauphin, who, as soon as he heard of the treaty of Troye, took on him the style and authority of regent, and appealed to God and his sword for the maintenance of his title.

On his retirement he received flattering compliments from his adherents, while opposition were not ashamed of exhibiting a glowing exultation at their triumph.

Privately he was dreadfully annoyed, for he had intended to take Grenouille on a tour through the whole kingdom, recruiting adherents to his fluidal theory.

If we wish to understand the whole or any important part of the system of Islam, we must always begin by transporting ourselves into the third or fourth century of the Hijrah, and we must constantly bear in mind that from the Medina period downwards Islam has always been considered by its adherents as bound to regulate all the details of their life by means of prescriptions emanating directly or indirectly from God, and therefore incapable of being reformed.

Mohammedans in the civilized life of our days they are as innoxious as any other mediaeval dogmatic system that counts its millions of adherents among ourselves.

If you, Atma, are a true and faithful adherent of the Khalsa, you will thither repair as an envoy of the Maharanee, and will count her reward lightly won by danger encountered for the faith.

As the terms of communion were insensibly narrowed, and the spiritual authority of the prevailing party was exercised with increasing severity, many of its most respectable adherents, who were called upon to renounce, were provoked to assert their private opinions, to pursue the consequences of their mistaken principles, and openly to erect the standard of rebellion against the unity of the church.

There is a small percentage of cases, as before stated, in which this form of treatment is not likely to give a permanent cure, from the fact that the omentum or intestine has become adherent externally, to the sac, or in the scrotum, to the coverings of the testicle.