an apostate from communism, he later became one of its harshest critics
became an apostate to liberalism after he had gotten wealthy
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This need that some MAGA apostates feel to rationalize their previous poor judgment can be harmless, if irritating.—Michelle Goldberg, Mercury News, 28 Apr. 2026 Weiss, meanwhile, is a legacy media apostate who launched The Free Press after quitting The New York Times in protest.—Aidan McLaughlin, Vanity Fair, 23 Apr. 2026 To tell Republicans this is to be an apostate.—Erick Erickson, Oc Register, 17 Feb. 2026 The first such, that of John McCain, in September of 2018, felt like a meeting of the resistance, a clarion call to take up arms where the late senator, another Republican who turned apostate rather than submit to Trump, had left them on the field.—Susan B. Glasser, New Yorker, 20 Nov. 2025 See All Example Sentences for apostate
Word History
Etymology
Middle English apostata, apostate, in part continuing Old English apostata (weak noun), in part borrowed from Anglo-French apostate, apostata, both borrowed from Late Latin apostata "rebel against God, fallen Christian, heretic," borrowed from Late Greek apostátēs "rebel against God, apostate," going back to Greek, "defector, rebel," from aposta-, variant stem of aphístamai, aphístasthai "to stand away from, keep aloof from, revolt" + -tēs, agent suffix — more at apostasy