Anglicanize
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editVerb
editAnglicanize (third-person singular simple present Anglicanizes, present participle Anglicanizing, simple past and past participle Anglicanized) (transitive)
- To anglicize.
- 1823 October 13, Leicester Stanhope, Greece, in 1823 and 1824; Being a Series of Letters and Other Documents on the Greek Revolution, Written During a Visit to That Country[1], new edition, London: Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, published 1825, page 12:
- The Count resumed by observing that the Committee had done, and might still do, great good, but that we must not attempt to Anglicanize Greece. I replied that we rather wished to Americanize her.
- To make Anglican.
- 1831 March 19, The Jesuit, volume 2, number 29, page 229:
- A report which we strongly suspect has been manufactured by a mock-Orthodox Editor in New-York […] is going the rounds of the Calvinistic prints in town and country. The amount of it is, that about four hundred of the French Clergy have separated themselves from the Roman Catholic Church, and have determined to anglicanize themselves, by taking wives and thus living rather in imitation of a mis-named Reformation, than of the Apostles and their legitimate successors.
- 1911, S. H. Blake, quoting E. C. Cayley, Synod of the Diocese of Toronto, 1911: A Promise Fulfilled[3], [Ontario?], page 22:
- In your attitude towards High Churchmen you are ignoring the breadth and comprehensiveness of the Church of England. […] The Church of England is neither Catholic merely nor Protestant merely, it is both. Some who greatly value the Catholic heritage of this Church, and who do not so value its Protestant heritage, are tempted, we may say, to over-Anglicanize. Others, who greatly value the Protestant heritage, of the Church, and who do not so value its Catholic heritage, are tempted, we may say, to under-Anglicanize.