Definition of Anglicanism in English:
 Anglicanism
noun ˈaŋɡlɪkənɪz(ə)mˈæŋɡləkəˌnɪzəm
mass nounThe faith and practices of the Anglican Christian Churches.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  The Episcopalian Church is essentially the American branch of Anglicanism.
 -  It was the length of her reign that secured Anglicanism and established it as Protestant.
 -  The reshaping of contemporary Anglicanism can be understood in ways that reflect the most important features of historic Anglicanism.
 -  The future of Anglicanism may depend upon the American Episcopal Church's ability to find a way out of its terrible constraints.
 -  Anglicanism still claims 70 percent of the population, most of whom are nominal members.
 -  The influence of the Dissenting churches, and the spiritual revival of Methodism, gradually led Welsh society away from Anglicanism.
 -  Anglicanism is, theologically, the eccentric cousin in the family of Western Christianity.
 -  The retention and celebration of corporate daily prayer has been one of the hallmarks of Anglicanism.
 -  She discusses the challenges of creating an American version of Anglicanism at the end of the Revolutionary War.
 -  Cromwell's failure to regulate schoolmasters and tutors was a principal reason why Anglicanism had thrived in the 1650s.
 
  Definition of Anglicanism in US English:
 Anglicanism
nounˈaNGɡləkəˌnizəmˈæŋɡləkəˌnɪzəm
The faith and practices of the Anglican Christian Churches.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  The future of Anglicanism may depend upon the American Episcopal Church's ability to find a way out of its terrible constraints.
 -  The influence of the Dissenting churches, and the spiritual revival of Methodism, gradually led Welsh society away from Anglicanism.
 -  Anglicanism still claims 70 percent of the population, most of whom are nominal members.
 -  The reshaping of contemporary Anglicanism can be understood in ways that reflect the most important features of historic Anglicanism.
 -  She discusses the challenges of creating an American version of Anglicanism at the end of the Revolutionary War.
 -  It was the length of her reign that secured Anglicanism and established it as Protestant.
 -  Cromwell's failure to regulate schoolmasters and tutors was a principal reason why Anglicanism had thrived in the 1650s.
 -  Anglicanism is, theologically, the eccentric cousin in the family of Western Christianity.
 -  The Episcopalian Church is essentially the American branch of Anglicanism.
 -  The retention and celebration of corporate daily prayer has been one of the hallmarks of Anglicanism.