How to Use conformist in a Sentence

conformist

adjective
  • One of the biggest challenges any White racial non-conformist faces is being expelled by their tribe.
    John Blake, CNN, 1 Jan. 2022
  • There was a little reference to people who were older than me at school who impressed me, who seemed quite non-conformist.
    Ryan Parker, The Hollywood Reporter, 3 June 2022
  • The idea that most of the planet followed and cared about a couple dozen people who sang songs or appeared in films will strike us as strange and embarrassingly conformist.
    George Gurley, New York Times, 26 Jan. 2023
  • Described as anti-conformist and a tribute to masculine freedom, this is a fragrance perfect for the gentleman looking to make a statement and break the mold.
    Grooming Playbook, The Salt Lake Tribune, 11 May 2022
  • Fellow radio DJs in the electronic underground, the pair were joined by their desire to make their mark on the relatively conformist music scene.
    Monica Kim, Vogue, 17 Feb. 2023
  • Through the 1940s, jazz-loving white outsiders such as the Beats picked up on cool, including its non-conformist undertones, and disseminated it to the rest of America.
    Quartz Staff, Quartz, 22 Nov. 2020
  • In the 17th century play, Dom Juan is a non-conformist who casts off many women after seducing them and harbors a disregard for religion and social norms.
    Bellamy Richardson, PEOPLE.com, 12 July 2022
  • The results have been far from unpromising, notwithstanding the fog machine of an unimaginative and conformist press.
    Holman W. Jenkins, WSJ, 20 Oct. 2020
  • Even so, Mailer concluded his piece with a spurt of anti-conformist rhetoric that anticipated the countercultural ethos of the 1960s.
    Steven Litt, cleveland, 6 June 2021
  • As hard as being openly gay may be in Japan’s conformist society, in some ways public attitudes have evolved more quickly than those of the country’s political leaders.
    New York Times, 5 June 2021
  • People in the middle of status hierarchies are more conformist than those above and those below, motivated by fear of status loss; Barbara Ehrenreich called it the fear of falling.
    Joan C. Williams, The New Republic, 19 Apr. 2022
  • This difference is visible on the battlefield, where the Russian Army is conformist and cowering, and the outnumbered and outgunned Ukrainian Army adaptable and creative.
    New York Times, 22 Apr. 2022
  • And where the exercise of one’s imagination can be dismissed as a blandly unimaginative, even conformist gesture?
    Justin Chang, Los Angeles Times, 6 Apr. 2023
  • The neighborhood earned a new reputation as a place to escape the pressures of South Korean society, bound by Confucian hierarchies and conformist views.
    Choe Sang-Hun, BostonGlobe.com, 5 Nov. 2022
  • The Drudge Report has become a conformist shadow of its formerly bratty, oppositional self.
    Aaron Pressman, Fortune, 18 Dec. 2020
  • What rankles—or to use one of the artist’s preferred words, sucks—is that Zappa’s concept of anti-conformist individualism settled into something so conventional.
    John Semley, The New Republic, 26 Nov. 2020
  • These days, that strategy feels more conformist than revolutionary.
    Justin Phillips, San Francisco Chronicle, 5 Mar. 2023
  • How the girls survive the conformist pressures and prejudices of their small-minded town would be sufficiently gripping thanks to Barnhill’s skills at developing complex, empathetic characters.
    Erin Douglass, The Christian Science Monitor, 16 June 2022
  • But the taboos that governed political affiliation in what was until very recently a high-consensus, highly conformist society have been breached.
    Dominic Green, WSJ, 13 Sep. 2022
  • What’s worse, many approaches toward A.I. creativity will actually lead, over time, to the production of increasingly conformist works—the exact opposite of what creative processes should be trying to do.
    Jeremy Kahn, Fortune, 18 Aug. 2020
  • The deep conformist tendencies of Japanese society sometimes set off discriminatory attitudes about mental health.
    Yuri Kageyama, ajc, 31 Dec. 2021
  • Though remembered as an admirer of American democracy, Tocqueville was dismayed by individualist, commercialist, and conformist tendencies.
    Samuel Goldman, The Week, 20 Oct. 2021
  • One of the biggest challenges any White racial non-conformist faces is being expelled by their tribe.
    John Blake, CNN, 1 Jan. 2022
  • There was a little reference to people who were older than me at school who impressed me, who seemed quite non-conformist.
    Ryan Parker, The Hollywood Reporter, 3 June 2022
  • The idea that most of the planet followed and cared about a couple dozen people who sang songs or appeared in films will strike us as strange and embarrassingly conformist.
    George Gurley, New York Times, 26 Jan. 2023
  • Described as anti-conformist and a tribute to masculine freedom, this is a fragrance perfect for the gentleman looking to make a statement and break the mold.
    Grooming Playbook, The Salt Lake Tribune, 11 May 2022
  • Fellow radio DJs in the electronic underground, the pair were joined by their desire to make their mark on the relatively conformist music scene.
    Monica Kim, Vogue, 17 Feb. 2023
  • Through the 1940s, jazz-loving white outsiders such as the Beats picked up on cool, including its non-conformist undertones, and disseminated it to the rest of America.
    Quartz Staff, Quartz, 22 Nov. 2020
  • In the 17th century play, Dom Juan is a non-conformist who casts off many women after seducing them and harbors a disregard for religion and social norms.
    Bellamy Richardson, PEOPLE.com, 12 July 2022
  • The results have been far from unpromising, notwithstanding the fog machine of an unimaginative and conformist press.
    Holman W. Jenkins, WSJ, 20 Oct. 2020

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'conformist.' 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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