illiberal - use in sentences

Modifies a noun

  • democracy: The specter of what analyst Fareed Zakaria has called " illiberal democracy " has emerged in the South.
  • legislation: In times of moral panic, Parliament has consistently shown itself easily capable of distinctly illiberal legislation.
  • measure: What is typical about Maggie's approach is that she does not move beyond the rhetoric of condemning illiberal measures in their own terms.
  • state: This is about taking on the government in areas where they have been moving us toward an illiberal police state.
  • policy: Above all, they say, your access to the web cannot be prevented, certainly not without draconian illiberal state policies.
  • law: After the end of the era of Roe v Wade there will not be a uniform shift to illiberal abortion laws.

Modifying Another Word

  • profoundly: Rousseau, tho he thought he was liberating the people, was in fact profoundly illiberal.
  • deeply: I was disappointed to see in that speech a Bill to introduce the deeply illiberal measure of identity cards.
  • distinctly: In times of moral panic, Parliament has consistently shown itself easily capable of distinctly illiberal legislation.
  • increasingly: It is undemocratic, increasingly illiberal and riddled with fraud and corruption.
  • inherently: The state, by contrast, coercively imposes ultimate control and is thus inherently illiberal and naturally Procrustean.

Used with adjective complement

  • become: We have become illiberal in our desire to curb what was once normal behavior.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.