haramize

English

Etymology

haram + -ize

Verb

haramize (third-person singular simple present haramizes, present participle haramizing, simple past and past participle haramized)

  1. (transitive, rare) To make (something) haram.
    • 1999, Robert Chazan, כי ברוך הוא: Ancient Near Eastern, Biblical, and Judaic Studies in Honor of Baruch Levine (p. 321)
      had to enter the “haramized” or taboo state
    • 2005, Signe Howell, The Ethnography of Moralities
      Many Muslim groups do not practice haramized lifestyles.
    • 2009, F. E. Peters, The Monotheists (p. 159)
      [] like the “haramized” Muslim pilgrims about to begin the hajj (see II/6), and was thus removed from ordinary use or circulation, a point over which Jesus argued with the Pharisees (Mark 7:11)
    • 2014, Dominik Mueller, Islam, Politics and Youth in Malaysia: The Pop-Islamist Reinvention of PAS
      [] the effects of the massive Islamization on the increasingly ‘haramized’ (Peletz 2011: 137) non-Muslim population in Malaysia should be studied as well.

Antonyms

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