English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

un- +‎ Christianlike or un- +‎ Christian +‎ -like

Adjective edit

unchristianlike (comparative more unchristianlike, superlative most unchristianlike)

  1. Not Christian-like.
    Antonym: Christian-like

Usage notes edit

  • Of the forms unchristianlike, unchristian-like, un-Christianlike, and un-Christian-like, unchristianlike is most common.[1] As of 2022, unchristianlike is about twice as common as un-Christian-like but it used to be many more times more common.[2] GPO manual recommends using a hyphen with words ending in -like when the first element is a proper name;[3] unchristianlike is at odds with this recommendation.

References edit