How to Use adherent in a Sentence

adherent

noun
  • The teams in this World Series have their share of adherents to such traditions.
    James Wagner, New York Times, 28 Oct. 2019
  • That is why adherents sometimes wear Hawaiian shirts, say those who track them.
    New York Times, 3 May 2020
  • But no matter the fanaticism of the adherents, there is a ceiling on converts willing to listen to 15-minute songs about the shadows of the moon.
    Jeff Weiss, Spin, 21 Aug. 2023
  • As if hours of fasting weren’t enough to pique the appetite, many Ramadan adherents can look forward to the sweet taste of qatayef when the sun finally does set.
    Jen Rose Smith, CNN, 6 June 2023
  • For the next fifteen years, the United States and the United Kingdom became the leading adherents to the no-concessions framework.
    Joel Simon, The New Yorker, 7 Feb. 2020
  • This is a 23% spike, just by altering the definition of who is an adherent.
    Andy Larsen, The Salt Lake Tribune, 10 Dec. 2022
  • And sorry, your beef is a climate risk according to ESG adherent Rabobank.
    Kenneth Rapoza, Forbes, 1 Aug. 2022
  • Among adherents, March was set aside for children to die, April for women and May for men, according to accounts from survivors.
    Rael Ombuor, Washington Post, 7 June 2023
  • But adherents are quick to note that girl dinners are not about deprivation.
    Jessica Roy, New York Times, 8 July 2023
  • Far more winning is Rick’s conversation with a child star (Julia Butters), an eight-year-old adherent of the Method.
    Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, 26 July 2019
  • These days, practically the whole thing is a shrine to a one-term president, one that his adherents attend as pilgrims.
    Curbed, 2 Oct. 2023
  • However, that might not be convincing enough for iOS adherents to jump over to Android.
    Cameron Faulkner, The Verge, 7 Aug. 2019
  • The collapse had been particularly swift in the priest’s own Brazil — the church’s strongest redoubt by measure of Catholic adherents.
    Bishop Sand, Washington Post, 17 Feb. 2024
  • Of course, that doesn’t reduce its value to QAnon adherents, who view it as a potential gateway to their more radical ideas.
    Miles Klee, Rolling Stone, 14 Aug. 2023
  • In a sense, Annie is an adherent of the Roland Barthes school of literary criticism: in her mind, the death of Misery is a tragedy, but the death of the author would be, at most, an inconvenience.
    Kristen Roupenian, The New Yorker, 5 Aug. 2021
  • Their close friendship signals that the ties that bind adherents of Judaism and Islam can remain strong, even as the war pitting people of their faiths against each other rages.
    Kurt Streeter, New York Times, 21 Oct. 2023
  • Named one of the top trending diets in 2018 by Google, Optavia has received an endorsement from a celebrity adherent, too.
    Caroline Picard, Good Housekeeping, 24 Nov. 2020
  • One suspect from the melees was Lindsey Moers, an alleged adherent of the anti-facist Antifa movement.
    Thomas Brewster, Forbes, 17 May 2021
  • Today, the valley is the headquarters of a faith with 17 million adherents worldwide and a tableau of verdant lawns, fertile farmland and booming growth.
    Karin Brulliard, Washington Post, 25 June 2023
  • The Houthis took more and more territory and gained adherents by claiming to stand against corruption and the unfair transition.
    Nicolas Niarchos, The New Yorker, 31 Jan. 2024
  • Pulgarin had his first cup after a kava bar opened behind his hair salon in 2013 and has been an adherent ever since.
    Ben Crandell, sun-sentinel.com, 21 Apr. 2021
  • Prepping has gone mainstream, its adherents no longer fringe actors but quirky soothsayers of sorts.
    Kate Knibbs, Wired, 16 Apr. 2020
  • Some adherents have adopted the notion that the 5G frequency spectrum somehow transmits and spreads the virus, as if in a wireless miasma.
    Amy Davidson Sorkin, The New Yorker, 24 Apr. 2020
  • The journalist David Dayen argued a similar case in 2018, for the New Republic; and since then, the idea has quietly been gaining adherents.
    Gilad Edelman, Wired, 22 Mar. 2020
  • Named one of the top trending diets back in 2018 by analysts at Google, the Optavia program has gone on to receive an endorsement from a celebrity adherent, too.
    Caroline Picard, Good Housekeeping, 25 Oct. 2022
  • The country has a long history of bloody confrontation between adherents of the two religions.
    The Economist, 8 Aug. 2019
  • Now, Qanon adherents are employing the same tactics on the 2020 presidential race.
    Elise Thomas, Wired, 17 Feb. 2020
  • These pundits are the opposite of adherents; all hail the Incoherents!
    Thomas Chatterton Williams, Harper's magazine, 20 Jan. 2020
  • There is a long line of adherents to this vision, beginning in 1945 with Vannevar Bush and continuing through Ted Nelson, who coined the word hypermedia.
    Steven Levy, WIRED, 8 Dec. 2023
  • And its adherents say de-influencing could have a positive effect on the environment.
    Brianna Scott, NPR, 25 Mar. 2024

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