Unitarian

See also: unitarian

English

Etymology

Related to New Latin ūnitārius (from Latin ūnitās (unity)) -an. First documented as unitaria religio, in a decree of the Diet of Lécfalva (1600). In English since 1687 [1]

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -ɛəɹiən

Noun

Unitarian (plural Unitarians)

  1. (now inexact) Alternative letter-case form of unitarian: any Christian who denies the doctrine of the Trinity.
    Antonym: Trinitarian
    • 1836, Alexander Fleming, A Narrative of the Proceedings of the Presbytery of Paisley,:
      But since Smith's ( of Norwich ) Bill passed , in 1813 , relieving Unitarians, as a religious sect, from the operation of the old law
  2. A follower of Unitarian Universalism or a similar non-credal religion that originated historically from Christian Unitarianism.
    Synonym: Unitarian Universalist
    • 2020, Jenny Offill, Weather, Granta Books (2021), page 197:
      The Unitarians never kneel. But I want to kneel.
  3. (rare) Alternative letter-case form of unitarian: any monotheist, particularly non-Christian monotheists (Muslims, Jews, etc.) as discussed from a Christian perspective.
  4. A member of a political movement advocating a unitary state rather than a federal one, especially the Unitarios of nineteenth century Argentina (known as the Unitarian Party in English).

Derived terms

Translations

Adjective

Unitarian (comparative more Unitarian, superlative most Unitarian)

  1. Pertaining to Unitarianism.

Translations

References

  1. Stephen Nye (1687) A brief history of the Unitarians: called also Socinians. In four letters, written to a Friend
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