How to Use dogma in a Sentence

dogma

noun
  • These new findings challenge the current dogma in the field.
  • Their dogma and rites have yet to be pulled from the fractal DMT space.
    Justin Higginbottom, The New Republic, 3 Jan. 2023
  • Maybe now is a good time to challenge the dogma that has been holding us back.
    James Breiding, Scientific American, 16 June 2021
  • As if somehow people were free to oppose that dogma and norms of the time. . . .
    Washington Post, 13 Jan. 2021
  • Only on the far right is such insane dogma is at the core of their beliefs.
    Will Oremus, Washington Post, 14 Dec. 2023
  • That childhood left me with little dogma on what has to be served on this day.
    Christian Reynoso, San Francisco Chronicle, 10 Nov. 2021
  • This, rather than the finer points of the dogma, is what likely comes across as compelling to the people around you.
    Tarot Astrologers, Chicago Tribune, 19 Feb. 2023
  • In terms of dogma, 32% of Latino Catholics say they are bound by faith in such decisions.
    Los Angeles Times, 19 July 2022
  • Parents who want their children to be force-fed left-wing dogma will still be able to find schools that fill that bill.
    Dave Seminara, National Review, 10 Feb. 2022
  • Who are the anti-Paxxers, and how dangerous is their dogma?
    Rachel Gutman-Wei, The Atlantic, 22 Nov. 2022
  • And now, the man who Catholic dogma holds infallible as a teacher of the faith is trying to restrict the Latin Mass.
    Keith Bierygolick, The Enquirer, 13 Aug. 2021
  • To look beyond dogma and status quo to find new ways forward to a brighter future?
    David Ellenstein Writer, San Diego Union-Tribune, 5 Sep. 2021
  • So goes the central dogma that has ruled neuroscience since the early ’90s.
    Megan Molteni, STAT, 5 Nov. 2021
  • How to explain the Democrats’ sudden switch from free-trade dogma to free-trade restrictions?
    John R. MacArthur, Harper’s Magazine , 7 Dec. 2021
  • The dogma states that the end of time is still being written, that the Time-Keepers are transforming it into utopia.
    Chris Smith, BGR, 7 July 2021
  • The question now is whether the coronavirus might wipe the testing dogma clean, shaping a new path forward.
    Carolyn Barber, Fortune, 2 Mar. 2021
  • Kind of a pain — easier to have a dogma — but necessary and important all the same.
    Jay Nordlinger, National Review, 26 July 2021
  • Her dogma is: The bigger your fabulous gets, the less room there is for hate and hostility.
    Anna Kaufman, USA TODAY, 29 June 2023
  • Don't be trapped by dogma -- which is living with the results of other people's thinking.
    Tom Page and Sana Noor Haq, CNN, 13 May 2021
  • And, at the very least, doubt is the antidote to dogma and fanaticism and reductionism.
    Amanda Petrusich, The New Yorker, 23 Mar. 2023
  • To Raisman, the images shattered the dogma that the nerves in the human body declined after infancy.
    Isaac Chotiner, The New Yorker, 12 Aug. 2021
  • The stage, where dogma goes to die, isn’t meant to reinforce confirmation bias.
    Los Angeles Times, 21 Dec. 2020
  • In the absence of dogma is opportunity: What should this drink be?
    Jason O'Bryan, Robb Report, 27 Aug. 2022
  • Most parents don’t want progressive dogma force-fed to their children in school.
    Andrea Picciotti-Bayer, National Review, 1 June 2023
  • But recently, science has begun to cast doubt on that dogma.
    Avery Hurt, Discover Magazine, 15 Feb. 2022
  • Trump’s lies have now become dogma on the Republican side.
    David Lauter, Los Angeles Times, 7 Jan. 2022
  • The idea that the images were wonderful had somehow gotten mixed up with the dogma that the images were nothing but wonderful.
    Teju Cole, New York Times, 25 May 2023
  • In Iran’s cities, the violence around this dogma did not distract from the economic fury, but amplify it.
    Nick Paton Walsh, CNN, 23 Dec. 2022
  • In some ways, Charles’s brand of faith — with greater focus on spirituality than dogma — puts him more in line with the British public.
    Michelle Boorstein, Washington Post, 13 Sep. 2022
  • She was born in Boston in 1934, to a Jamaican family that believed in a dogma one might now call Black Excellence.
    Doreen St. Félix, The New Yorker, 29 Sep. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'dogma.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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