non-fanatic

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English

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Adjective

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non-fanatic (comparative more non-fanatic, superlative most non-fanatic)

  1. Alternative form of nonfanatic
    • 1996, W. A. R. Shadid, P. Sj. van Koningsveld, Political Participation and Identities of Muslims in Non-Muslim States, →ISBN:
      To Italians, the Senegalese Muslims give the impression of being very different, though not in a threatening way: their brand of Islam is considered by many "reassuring" and "non-fanatic".
    • 2006, Hala El Badry, A Certain Woman, →ISBN:
      I remember how Egypt used to absorb all fanatics in its civilization and reshape them and turn them into non-fanatic Egyptian citizens.
    • 2011, E. Clarke, Politics, Religion and the Song of Songs in Seventeenth-Century England, →ISBN:
      Perhaps the believers in the narrative of the mystical marriage could not recognise the reign of the sober and distinctly non-fanatic William and Mary as the happy ending of Sion in Distress or the miracle Keach represents it as being on the front cover of Distressed Sion Relieved: 'the late Admirable and Stupendious Providence which hath wrought such a sudden and Wonderful Deliverance for this Nation, and Gods Sion therein'.

Noun

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non-fanatic (plural non-fanatics)

  1. Alternative form of nonfanatic
    • 1952, Gabriel Marcel, Men against humanity, page 101:
      The first obvious observation to be made is that the fanatic never sees himself as a fanatic ; it is only the non-fanatic who can recognize him as a fanatic ; so that when this judgment, or this accusation, is made, the fanatic can always say that he is misunderstood and slandered.
    • 1962, Kate O'Brien, My Ireland, page 113:
      However, as a green non-fanatic and, it must be said, non-patriot, in those noble and desperate days in Dublin, I should have felt awkward, among the quick and heroic (and I call some of my then-friends heroic without irony, as I know they hold their lives ready for Ireland at all hours — to my great wonder) — but I do not remember to have been embarrassed.
    • 1997, Russell Hardin, One for All: The Logic of Group Conflict, →ISBN, page 200:
      Hence, the intensity of the community's values may tend to drive the non-fanatics out.