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pious

American  
[pahy-uhs] / ˈpaɪ əs /

adjective

  1. having or showing a dutiful spirit of reverence for God or an earnest wish to fulfill religious obligations.

    Synonyms:
    reverent, godly, devout
  2. characterized by a hypocritical concern with virtue or religious devotion; sanctimonious.

  3. practiced or used in the name of real or pretended religious motives, or for some ostensibly good object; falsely earnest or sincere.

    a pious deception.

  4. of or relating to religious devotion; sacred rather than secular.

    pious literature.

  5. having or showing appropriate respect or regard for parents or others.


pious British  
/ ˈpaɪəs /

adjective

  1. having or expressing reverence for a god or gods; religious; devout

  2. marked by reverence

  3. marked by false reverence; sanctimonious

  4. sacred; not secular

  5. archaic having or expressing devotion for one's parents or others

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Related Words

See religious.

Other Word Forms

  • piously adverb
  • piousness noun
  • prepious adjective
  • prepiously adverb
  • pseudopious adjective
  • pseudopiously adverb
  • quasi-pious adjective
  • quasi-piously adverb
  • semipious adjective
  • semipiously adverb
  • semipiousness noun
  • superpious adjective
  • superpiously adverb
  • superpiousness noun
  • unpious adjective
  • unpiously adverb

Etymology

Origin of pious

First recorded in 1595–1605; from Latin pius, akin to piāre “to propitiate”

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The Portuguese design genius for mixing the pious with playfully overelaborated touches reaches its apotheosis at this Unesco World Heritage site—Portugal’s equivalent of France’s monumental Cathedral of Chartres.

From The Wall Street Journal

The sun was eclipsed, horses were spooked and the pious dropped to their knees.

From The Wall Street Journal

If that sounds pious for a politician, Mr. Sasse doesn’t mean it to be.

From The Wall Street Journal

And two Americans: Kenyon, a wry, observant, skeptical humanist sculptor, perhaps a stand-in for Hawthorne himself; and Hilda, a New England Puritan painter—self-possessed, pious, unswervingly loyal, pure as a flight of doves.

From The Wall Street Journal

Erdogan, a devout Muslim and graduate of a clerical school, has previously said he aims to raise a "pious generation".

From Barron's