alike-minded

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English[edit]

Adjective[edit]

alike-minded (comparative more alike-minded, superlative most alike-minded)

  1. (obsolete) like-minded
    • July 1638, Robert Sanderson, sermon at Theobalds:
      I doubt not, but in the then Roman church, at the time when this epistle was written, the strong agreed well enough among themselves, and were all alike-minded, and so the weak among themselves, all alike-minded too
    • 1641, Joseph Hall, The Mischief of Faction, and the Remedy of it (sermon):
      And, I would to God, not you only, that hear me this day, but all our brethren of this land were alike-minded: we should not have such libellous presses []

References[edit]