English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

pan- +‎ Islamic

Adjective edit

Pan-Islamic (not comparable)

  1. Pertaining to all Islamic groups in the world.
    • 1999, John L. Esposito, The Islamic Threat: Myth or Reality?, →ISBN, page 222:
      The past and present fear of a monolithic Islamic threat has often been expressed in Pan-Islamic terminology.
    • 2004, Jacob M. Landau, Exploring Ottoman and Turkish History, →ISBN:
      This was repeated time and again in foreign propaganda, both during that time and in the Balkan War and First World War periods, as agents of the Committee of Union and Progress alternated between Pan-Turk and Pan-Islamic arguments to drum up support abroad, for example among elemnts of Turkic background in Afghanistan and Central Asia.
    • 2009, R Michael Feener, Terenjit Sevea, Islamic Connections: Muslim Societies in South and Southeast Asia, →ISBN:
      The jihad proclamation, Pan-Islamic sentiments presenting the Ottoman Sultan as Caliph, and feelings of Muslim solidarity combined to form a potentially powerful mix.