come-outer

See also: comeouter

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

come out + -er, referring to a passage in Corinthians in the Bible: "come out from among them, and be ye separate".

Noun

come-outer (plural come-outers)

  1. One who abandons or withdraws from an established religion, opinion, custom, creed, etc.
    Despite her family's wishes, she left Christianity, becoming a come-outer of her former faith.
  2. One who seeks radical political or religious reform.
    • 2003, M. Louise Greene, Ph. D., The Development of Religious Liberty in Connecticut, page 144:
      The passage of the Act for the Support of Literature and Religion raised, as the Congregationalists ought to have known it would, a violent protest from every dissenter and from every political come−outer.
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