English edit

Etymology edit

dogmatize +‎ -er

Noun edit

dogmatizer (plural dogmatizers)

  1. One who dogmatizes; a bold asserter.
    Synonym: dogmatist
    • 1654, Henry Hammond, Of Fundamentals in a Notion referring to Practise:
      But in stead of any fuller view of these, I shall mention some few of those, which our closer, and later experience hath made most familiar to us, and given us reason to look on with a quickness of sense, and dread, but those such, as being not entred into the Confessions of any national Church, are not properly chargeable either on Papists, or Protestants, but on particular dogmatizers on both parties []
    • 2015, Andrew Redden, Diabolism in Colonial Peru, 1560–1750:
      If it was the case that native dogmatizers were prohibiting the use of Spanish before the huacas and the use of the name of Jesus, then the information implies a large degree of cultural and religious acculturation by 1617 in the Province of Lima.

Latin edit

Verb edit

dogmatizer

  1. first-person singular present passive subjunctive of dogmatizō