See also: Dissentism

English

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Etymology

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From dissent +‎ -ism.

Noun

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dissentism (uncountable)

  1. (rare, nonstandard) The practice or act of dissent.
    • 1866, Matthew Arnold, Letter to his mother [Mary Penrose]:
      I like to think that the Star, in order to get the benefit of the irony on landlordism, has to digest the irony on dissentism.
    • 2008, Robert B. Heilman, The Ghost on the Ramparts and Other Essays in the Humanities, University of Georgia Press, →ISBN, page 152:
      It is the humanities' contribution to the fraternity of mutations in which appear scientism, methodism, democratism, communitarianism, and dissentism.
    • 2021 October 31, Khalid Hussain Mir, “Abdul Rahman Bulbul Shah: The first preacher of Islam in Kashmir”, in Rising Kashmir[1]:
      Rinchan Shah was the ruler of Kashmir at that time, who practiced Buddhism, while his wife, Kota Rani daughter of Ram Chandrina, was a follower of Hindu Dharma. The religious divergences between the two spouses always created the dissentism.

References

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