Word Meanings - FORMALISM - Book Publishers vocabulary database
The practice or the doctrine of strict adherence to, or dependence on, external forms, esp. in matters of religion. Official formalism. Sir H. Rawlinson.
Related words: (words related to FORMALISM)
- STRICT
Upright, or straight and narrow; -- said of the shape of the plants or their flower clusters. Syn. -- Exact; accurate; nice; close; rigorous; severe. -- Strict, Severe. Strict, applied to a person, denotes that he conforms in his motives and acts - OFFICIALISM
The state of being official; a system of official government; also, adherence to office routine; red-tapism. Officialism may often drift into blunders. Smiles. - PRACTICER
1. One who practices, or puts in practice; one who customarily performs certain acts. South. 2. One who exercises a profession; a practitioner. 3. One who uses art or stratagem. B. Jonson. - STRICTNESS
Quality or state of being strict. - RELIGION
A monastic or religious order subject to a regulated mode of life; the religious state; as, to enter religion. Trench. A good man was there of religion. Chaucer. 4. Strictness of fidelity in conforming to any practice, as if it were an enjoined - EXTERNAL
Away from the mesial plane of the body; lateral. External angles. See under Angle. (more info) 1. Outward; exterior; relating to the outside, as of a body; being without; acting from without; -- opposed to internal; as, the external - OFFICIALTY
The charge, office, court, or jurisdiction of an official. Ayliffe. - STRICTURED
Affected with a stricture; as, a strictured duct. - PRACTICED
1. Experienced; expert; skilled; as, a practiced marksman. "A practiced picklock." Ld. Lytton. 2. Used habitually; learned by practice. - RELIGIONISM
1. The practice of, or devotion to, religion. 2. Affectation or pretense of religion. - STRICTURE
A localized morbid contraction of any passage of the body. Cf. Organic stricture, and Spasmodic stricture, under Organic, and Spasmodic. Arbuthnot. (more info) 1. Strictness. A man of stricture and firm abstinence. Shak. 2. A stroke; a glance; - EXTERNALLY
In an external manner; outwardly; on the outside; in appearance; visibly. - PRACTICE
A easy and concise method of applying the rules of arithmetic to questions which occur in trade and business. (more info) also, practique, LL. practica, fr. Gr. Practical, and cf. Pratique, 1. Frequently repeated or customary action; - EXTERNALITY
State of being external; exteriority; - EXTERNALIZE
To make external; to manifest by outward form. Thought externalizes itself in language. Soyce. - RELIGIONIZE
To bring under the influence of religion. Mallock. - STRICTLY
In a strict manner; closely; precisely. - OFFICIALLY
By the proper officer; by virtue of the proper authority; in pursuance of the special powers vested in an officer or office; as, accounts or reports officially vertified or rendered; letters officially communicated; persons officially notified. - OFFICIAL
Approved by authority; sanctioned by the pharmacopoeia; appointed to be used in medicine; as, an official drug or preparation. Cf. Officinal. 4. Discharging an office or function. The stomach and other parts official unto nutrition. Sir T. Browne. - STRICTION
The act of constricting, or the state of being constricted. Line of striction , the line on a skew surface that cuts each generator in that point of it that is nearest to the succeeding generator. - ASTRICT
To restrict the tenure of; as, to astrict lands. See Astriction, 4. Burrill. (more info) 1. To bind up; to confine; to constrict; to contract. The solid parts were to be relaxed or astricted. Arbuthnot. 2. To bind; to constrain; to restrict; to - BOA CONSTRICTOR
A large and powerful serpent of tropical America, sometimes twenty or thirty feet long. See Illustration in Appendix. Note: It has a succession of spots, alternately black and yellow, extending along the back. It kills its prey by constriction. - CORRELIGIONIST
A co-religion - INOFFICIALLY
Without the usual forms, or not in the official character. - RESTRICT
Restricted. - REDISTRICT
To divide into new districts. - BY-DEPENDENCE
An appendage; that which depends on something else, or is distinct from the main dependence; an accessory. Shak. - CONSTRICTION
1. The act of constricting by means of some inherent power or by movement or change in the thing itself, as distinguished from compression. 2. The state of being constricted; the point where a thing is constricted; a narrowing or binding. - VASOCONSTRICTOR
Causing constriction of the blood vessels; as, the vasoconstrictor nerves, stimulation of which causes constriction of the blood vessels to which they go. These nerves are also called vasohypertonic. n. - CONSTRICT
To draw together; to render narrower or smaller; to bind; to cramp; to contract or ause to shrink. Such things as constrict the fibers. Arbuthnot. Membranous organs inclosing a cavity which their contraction constrict. Todd & Bowman. - ADSTRICT
See ASTRICTION (more info) -- Ad*stric"tion, n. - DISTRICT
Rigorous; stringent; harsh. Punishing with the rod of district severity. Foxe.