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sect
1[sekt]
noun
a body of persons adhering to a particular religious faith; a religious denomination.
a group regarded as heretical or as deviating from a generally accepted religious tradition.
(in the sociology of religion) a Christian denomination characterized by insistence on strict qualifications for membership, as distinguished from the more inclusive groups called churches.
any group, party, or faction united by a specific doctrine or under a doctrinal leader.
-sect
2a combining form with the meaning “cut,” used in the formation of compound words bisect, dissect, exsect .
sect.
3abbreviation
section.
-sect
1combining form
to cut or divide, esp into a specified number of parts
trisect
sect
2/ sɛkt /
noun
a subdivision of a larger religious group (esp the Christian Church as a whole) the members of which have to some extent diverged from the rest by developing deviating beliefs, practices, etc
derogatory
a schismatic religious body characterized by an attitude of exclusivity in contrast to the more inclusive religious groups called denominations or Churches
a religious group regarded as extreme or heretical
a group of people with a common interest, doctrine, etc; faction
sect
A religious group, especially one that has separated from a larger group. Sect is often a term of disapproval.
Other Word Forms
- subsect noun
- undersect noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of -sect1
Origin of -sect2
Word History and Origins
Origin of -sect1
Origin of -sect2
Example Sentences
The tour might’ve been a gargantuan success, but it also exhausted a sect of the public who didn’t care about 24/7 Swift-mania.
Once known as Colonia Dignidad, it was home to a secretive religious sect founded by a manipulative and abusive leader who collaborated with the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
That has been especially true for the Druze, adherents of a syncretic sect that is an offshoot of Shiite Islam who constitute some 3% of Syria’s population.
Many Syrian Druze speak proudly — and often — of their sect’s role in building the country’s nationalist consciousness, with families touting their filial link to Sultan Al-Atrash, a revolutionary who mounted an uprising against French rule in Syria in the 1920s.
Waves of sectarian attacks have only reinforced their suspicions of Al-Sharaa: In March, government-linked factions massacred about 1,500 people, mostly from the Alawite sect, and in May, clashes in Druze-majority areas near the capital left 39 people dead.
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