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Pagan   /pˈeɪgən/   Listen
Pagan

adjective
1.
Not acknowledging the God of Christianity and Judaism and Islam.  Synonyms: ethnic, heathen, heathenish.
noun
1.
A person who does not acknowledge your god.  Synonyms: gentile, heathen, infidel.
2.
A person who follows a polytheistic or pre-Christian religion (not a Christian or Muslim or Jew).
3.
Someone motivated by desires for sensual pleasures.  Synonyms: hedonist, pleasure seeker.



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"Pagan" Quotes from Famous Books



... without delight of that sweet saint, Cecilia. What an example she gives us! In the midst of a pagan world, in the very heart of danger, at the moment when she was to be united to a man whose love was so utterly of earth, it seems to me as if she should have wept and trembled with fear. But instead, "during the music ...
— The Story of a Soul (L'Histoire d'une Ame): The Autobiography of St. Therese of Lisieux • Therese Martin (of Lisieux)

... practical inhabitants of Venice, in Padua, which had been subject to her since 1405, speculative thought and ideal studies were in full swing. There was no re-birth in Venice, whose tradition was unbroken and where "men were too genuinely pagan to care about the echo of a paganism in the remote past." St. Mark was the deity of Venice, and "the other twelve Apostles" were only obscurely connected with her religious life, which was strong and orthodox, but untroubled by metaphysical ...
— The Venetian School of Painting • Evelyn March Phillipps

... speaking German, were of less pure German blood than almost any other of the peoples that spoke that tongue. They were the product of a conquest undertaken late in the Middle Ages by German knights over a mixed Pagan population, Lithuanian and Slavonic, which inhabited the heaths and forests along the Baltic Sea. These German knights succeeded in their task, and compelled the subject population to accept Christianity, ...
— A General Sketch of the European War - The First Phase • Hilaire Belloc

... morality, but is forced to construct a mythology which outrages all moral considerations. Taken as a serious statement of fact, the anthropomorphism of the vulgar belief was open to the objections which Socrates brought against the Pagan mythology. The supreme ruler was virtually represented as arbitrary, ...
— The English Utilitarians, Volume II (of 3) - James Mill • Leslie Stephen

... determining the gender. Of most of the passions and moral qualities of man the ancients formed deities, as they did of various other things: and, when these are personified, they are usually made male or female, according as they were gods or goddesses in the pagan mythology. The same rule applies in other cases: and thus the planet Jupiter will be masculine; Venus, feminine: the ocean, Oceanus, masculine: rivers, months, and winds, the same: the names of places, countries, and islands, feminine."—Churchill's ...
— The Grammar of English Grammars • Goold Brown


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