Search for crossword answers and clues
One in the minority
Answer for the clue "One in the minority ", 9 letters:
dissenter
Alternative clues for the word dissenter
Word definitions for dissenter in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1630s, in 17c. especially of religions (with a capital D- from 1670s); agent noun from dissent .
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A dissenter (from the Latin dissentire , “to disagree”), is one who disagrees in matters of opinion, belief, etc. In the social and religious history of England and Wales , and, by extension, Ireland , however, it refers particularly to a member of a religious ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ A later residence in Northamptonshire was licensed in 1673 for dissenter meetings, in spite of his earlier bad reputation there. ▪ But in practice, if most countries want to go ahead with something, they may well ignore a lone ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a person who dissents from some established policy [syn: dissident , protester , objector , contestant ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dissenter \Dis*sent"er\, n. One who dissents; one who differs in opinion, or declares his disagreement. (Eccl.) One who separates from the service and worship of an established church; especially, one who disputes the authority or tenets of the Church of ...
Usage examples of dissenter.
The Crane Hearth once had a high status, and there had been people in other Camps who had been willing to sponsor them, but there had always been dissenters, and there could be no dissenters.
The beautiful, wonderful Schlaraffenland or Cockaigne or lubberland all rolled into one improbable thing, the country where dissenters are shot at sight and the laws are obeyed immediately or else.
American commercial culture co-opted the counterculture of communes and simple living, commodifying dissent, and selling it back to the dissenters.
That portion of the Jensen opinion emphasizing Congressional power in this respect has never been in issue in either the opinions of the dissenters in that case or in subsequent opinions critical of it, which in effect invite Congress to exercise its power to modify the maritime law.
Dissenters against Whigism in general, and the government leaders of that school as its most prominent advocates.
But what amused me most in his history was this, that very soon after having embraced Islam he was obliged in practice to become curious and discriminating in his new faith, to make war upon Mahometan dissenters, and follow the orthodox standard of the Prophet in fierce campaigns against the Wahabees, who are the Unitarians of the Mussulman world.
And it was with a wonderful address that the banker contrived at once to support the government, and yet, by the frequent expression of liberal opinions, to conciliate the Whigs and the Dissenters of his neighbourhood.
They were, in short, heathens and -- as they were once complacently catalogued by a distinguished prelate of the Church of England -- Dissenters.
Or let those dissenters enjoy but the same privileges in civils as his other subjects, and he will quickly find that these religious meetings will be no longer dangerous.
One of the very few exceptions I know of is the noted sf writer Theodore Sturgeon's novel Venus Plus X (1960), which depicts a Utopia in the classic sense, complete with universal brotherhood, understanding, intelligence, love and no dissenters in sight.
Come to think of it, those “Dutchmen” had looked a great deal more like English religious Dissenters than they had like actual Dutchmen, who (if the grapevine was to be believed) had long ago ditched their old Pilgrimish togs (which had been inspired by Spanish fashions anyway) and now dressed like everyone else in Europe.
And he ought industriously to exhort all men, whether private persons or magistrates (if any such there be in his church), to charity, meekness, and toleration, and diligently endeavour to ally and temper all that heat and unreasonable averseness of mind which either any man’s fiery zeal for his own sect or the craft of others has kindled against dissenters.
Caliban didn’t seem capable of providing it, but Troi began to wonder if there were other Dissenters, like Amoret, who might.
The computers assumed that these “fictions” were illusions created by the Dissenters, like cheap magic tricks.
Ferris was not, in reality, a hero, he was a monkey who did what he was told, but because the people of Rampart had no other outlet for their minds’ unconscious needs, they made Ferris a hero (after all, he looked like one) and the Dissenters an evil force for the hero to vanquish.