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Discover LudwigThe word 'recusant' is a correct and usable term in written English.
It is an adjective that can be used to describe a person or group who refuses to submit to an authority or comply with a rule. For example, you could say, "The recusant faction refused to pay taxes to the oppressive government".
Dictionary
recusant
noun
Someone refusing to attend Church of England services, between the sixteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
synonyms
Exact(21)
In 1791, with the help of a recusant priest from Brie, she produced the first Camembert by combining the recipe for Livarot, a local cheese, with the process of ladle-moulding used to make Brie.
He returned to England as a missionary in 1586, when he became chaplain to Anne Howard and spiritual adviser to her husband, the 1st Earl of Arundel, a recusant imprisoned in the Tower of London.
After 1635 Digby associated himself with the entourage of Henrietta Maria, Charles I's Catholic queen, and supported Charles's expedition against the Presbyterian Scots in 1639 40; for this, Digby was summoned by Parliament as a Catholic recusant and appeared before the bar of the House of Commons in 1641.
After studying at Oxford University (1597), he studied law but settled at Grace-Dieu Priory, from 1605, because he was a Roman Catholic recusant.
Thus, on June 6 , 1576 she was designated a recusant (i.e., one who fails to attend Anglican services).
"In effect for a period after I was released I was effectively under house arrest and went from friends to friends rather as if I were a recusant priest at the time of the Reformation I suppose, going from safe house to safe house".
Similar(18)
While it has a clear historical sense in the use of dissembling under unpropitious political circumstances – Protestants under Mary, Catholic recusants under Elizabeth, the "Family of Love" under everyone – MacCulloch extends the usage to analyse the Nicodemism of gay Anglo-Catholics, a kind of liturgical polari, which was ironically threatened by increased liberalism in other parts of the church.
For example, a statute of 1705 stated that "Popish recusants, convicts, Negroes, mulattoes, and Indian servants, and others not being Christians, shall be incapable to be witnesses in any cases whatsoever".
Anyone can now apply for a postal vote for any reason.In this section Those lucky target voters Votes in the bag Recusants' revenge Gentleman in waiting Not feeling so good Penalty kicks Uppers and downers Chinese takeaway Why the system favours Labour ReprintsCynics say that Labour, which is particularly vulnerable to low voter turnout, changed the rules for its own advantage.
David Fowkes, the association's secretary, thinks there is just "a social acceptance that everybody swears these days".In this section Those lucky target voters Votes in the bag Recusants' revenge Gentleman in waiting Not feeling so good Penalty kicks Uppers and downers Chinese takeaway Why the system favours Labour ReprintsLanguage barriers can cause referees to lose control.
He was one of the drafters of the oath of allegiance of 1606, which required English subjects to reject the pope's authority and to swear allegiance to the crown; the oath particularly targeted recusants, or English Roman Catholics who did not attend services of the Church of England.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com