At the very beginning of the Apostolic Age the universalistic spirit of Christianity had already broken through the particularistic limitations of Judaism.
All are particularistic and irreconcilable; all are organized on the basis of local, racial, or religious interests.
The political system of Germany to-day is the product of centuries of particularistic statecraft, capped, in 1871, by a partial centralization of sovereign organs and powers.
So keen was the particularistic spirit that not infrequently the various provinces of the kingdom were referred to in contemporary documents as "nations.
At one time or another almost every state has shown strong particularistic leanings; Connecticut and Pennsylvania, for example, quite as much as Virginia or Kentucky.
It is a peculiarly imperious necessity of our existence for us to Turkise the Arab lands, for the particularistic idea of nationality is awaking among the younger generation of Arabs, and already threatens us with a great catastrophe.
In short, the transition of Christianity from its Jewish to its Gentile form is not a mere enlargement of its field by the abolition of particularistic barriers.
In a number of the Psalms and in some later writings the very name JHVH was avoided probably on account of its particularistic tinge.
It was not by any means even a good example of Western particularistic feeling.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "particularistic" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.