How to Use impure in a Sentence
impure
adjective- Victorian notions of what qualified as impure art now strike us as laughable.
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The cure for impure thoughts, the priests told us, was to go out and play basketball.
— Lance Morrow, WSJ, 24 Oct. 2018 -
Tiffanie further alleged that the brothers were practicing witchcraft, and that the two had impure thoughts about the pastor.
— Chris Harris, PEOPLE.com, 17 June 2018 -
When a destination is deemed dead might be the best time to go there, as the most accurate reflection of our impure world.
— Ben Huberman, Longreads, 24 Oct. 2019 -
In many regions in India, menstruation is thought to be dirty and impure.
— Puja Changoiwala, SELF, 25 Sep. 2017 -
But if anybody else is dealing with these players, their motives are impure.
— Gary Bedore, kansascity, 18 Apr. 2018 -
There was no objection to a dog meet-up in a park, though Islamists consider dogs impure and see owning them as a Western habit.
— Diaa Hadid and Majd Al Waheidi, New York Times, 13 Mar. 2016 -
This includes refraining from impure and unkind thoughts, vulgar words, and bad deeds.
— Skyler Caruso, Peoplemag, 23 Mar. 2023 -
Unbeknownst to the cleaner, ash combined with the animal grease to create a simple, impure soap.
— Cody Cassidy, Time, 5 May 2020 -
However, this growing demand has led to an influx of impure products on the market.
— Amber Smith, Discover Magazine, 1 Aug. 2023 -
Why bother with jewelry when there was the thing itself: impure and unsimple.
— BostonGlobe.com, 2 Oct. 2019 -
Even on a first date, there’s suspicion that a foreigner could have impure intentions.
— Kalle Oskari Mattila, Washington Post, 25 Nov. 2019 -
This does not mean that your partner enabling your dreams through their money makes your relationship impure.
— Mark Travers, Forbes, 7 May 2023 -
Across the country, women in many homes are not allowed to cook or touch anyone during their period as they are considered impure and dirty.
— Reshmi Chakraborty, CNN, 27 May 2020 -
Essentially, a face scrub gets beneath the surface, and lifts away dead and impure skin cells, allowing newer, younger skin cells to surface.
— Grooming Playbook, The Salt Lake Tribune, 31 Mar. 2022 -
Fortunately, the sarin used was impure, otherwise the casualty list would have been much longer.
— Simon Cotton, Scientific American, 9 Mar. 2018 -
Our emotions are mixed and impure, messy, tangled, and at times contradictory, like everything else in our lives.
— Rafael Euba, Quartzy, 23 July 2019 -
Azad's Facebook post states that women are denied entry to the temple because of the belief that menstruating makes women impure.
— Alexi McCammond, Cosmopolitan, 23 Nov. 2015 -
In the generals’ worldview, women are often considered weak and impure.
— New York Times, 4 Mar. 2021 -
Music, like most beautiful things, is most seductive when impure.
— Burkhard Bilger, The New Yorker, 27 Mar. 2023 -
But an age of conflict invariably becomes, to some degree, an age of amorality because the only way to protect a world fit for freedom is to court impure partners and engage in impure acts.
— Hal Brands, Foreign Affairs, 20 Feb. 2024 -
Members of the higher caste sometimes consider Dalits impure, and in certain places, they still aren't allowed to enter the homes or temples of the upper-caste community or share utensils with them.
— Huizhong Wu, CNN, 3 Apr. 2018 -
That's why the silicon found in solar panels is impure, mixed in with another element, like phosphorous.
— David Grossman, Popular Mechanics, 6 July 2019 -
Using impure water in formula can prove fatal to infants.
— Richard Engel, NBC News, 6 Dec. 2023 -
The more obvious one, given those titular peepers, is that Mizu had a white father, rendering her an impure monster to her countrymen.
— Alan Sepinwall, Rolling Stone, 9 Nov. 2023 -
Yet all the choices in rhyme-making take place against the largely unheeded current of rhyme, pure and impure, that flows unimpeded from popular song and greeting-card sentiments and countless other forms.
— Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker, 23 May 2022 -
The decision to close the consulate followed weeks of unrest in the southern Iraqi city triggered by residents’ anger over meager electricity supplies and impure water, which made thousands of people ill.
— Michael R. Gordon, WSJ, 28 Sep. 2018 -
And in medieval and early modern Europe, when impure blood was believed to unbalance the humors of the body and cause disease, the creatures were seen as solicitous helpers, ever ready to relieve a patient of their unwelcome plasma.
— Zoey Poll, New York Times, 16 Feb. 2024 -
Most halachic authorities hold that the Holy of Holies’ exact location is unknown, and that today’s Jews are too ritually impure to risk the deadly consequences of trespassing on it.
— Armin Rosen, WSJ, 17 Nov. 2022 -
His fraternity brothers at Amherst College acknowledge his whiteness, but regard it as impure, murky.
— Jennifer Wilson, The New Yorker, 6 May 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'impure.' 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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