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catholic (adj.)

mid-14c., catholik, "of the doctrines of the ancient Church" (before the East/West schism), literally "universally accepted," from French catholique, from Church Latin catholicus "universal, general," from Greek katholikos, from phrase kath' holou "on the whole, in general," from kata "about" + genitive of holos "whole" (from PIE root *sol- "whole, well-kept").

Medieval Latin catholicus was practically synonymous with Christianus and meant "constituting or conforming to the church, its faith and organization" (as opposed to local sects or heresies).

With capital C-, it was applied by Protestants to the Church in Rome by c. 1554, after the Reformation began in England. The general sense of "embracing all, universal" in English is from 1550s. The meaning "not narrow-minded or bigoted" is from 1580s. The Latin word was rendered in Old English as eallgeleaflic.

also from mid-14c.

Catholic (n.)

"member of the Roman Catholic church," 1560s, from Catholic (adj.).

also from 1560s

Entries linking to catholic

Catholicism (n.)

"faith and practice of the Catholic church," 1610s, from Catholic + -ism.

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adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/. Ngrams are probably unreliable.

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updated on December 29, 2023

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