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puritanic

American  
[pyoor-i-tan-ik] / ˌpyʊər ɪˈtæn ɪk /

adjective

  1. relating to or characteristic of the Puritans or their beliefs and practices.

  2. very strict or obsessive about moral and religious matters; straitlaced; puritanical.


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.

He lived in almost puritanic simplicity with his mother, enjoyed the fleshpots of Brazil and Europe with his father.

From Time Magazine Archive

Eldest son of a poor Idaho farmer and his puritanic wife, Vridar grew up in a shack where food was scarce, comfort unheard-of, with no companions but his younger brother and sister.

From Time Magazine Archive

The long puritanic past did not allow that slow European training in æsthetic and harmless social enjoyments.

From Psychology and Social Sanity by Münsterberg, Hugo

Now that we realize our puritanic mistake about the God-given powers for artistic enjoyment, we are taking to our heart the ravishing delight that the quick and vivid sense of beauty can yield.

From The American Country Girl by Crow, Martha Foote

Not the broad, genial, worldly morality of Shakespeare; not the deep, devious, confused, but most human morality of the Bible; not a high, severe, ascetic morality; not even a sour, grim, puritanic morality.

From The English Stage Being an Account of the Victorian Drama by Filon, Augustin