Jewism

English

Etymology

Jew + -ism

Noun

Jewism (uncountable)

  1. (archaic, now proscribed) Judaism
    • 1840, James Elishama Smith, The Little Book; Or, Momentous Crisis of 1840, page 35:
      [] in asserting the unfitness of the four great beasts of Jewism, Catholicism, Protestantism, and Infidelity to reign over us, []
    • 1864, James Boully, The Oxford Declaration and the Eleven Thousand, page 10:
      And, moreover, in whatever manner the Jews may have sought to establish their doctrines, so, likewise, were all religions, long prior and subsequent to the existence of Jewism, spread abroad.
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