secular
secular
adjective seh-koo-LAHR Rare
Origin: From Latin saecularis (of an age, of the world).
Also means
century-long, age-old
Usage Note
Secular primarily means non-religious or lay, contrasted with religioso or eclesiástico — educación secular (secular education). It also retains the Latin sense of lasting for centuries: una tradición secular (an age-old tradition). This double meaning is a false-friend trap for English speakers, who associate 'secular' only with the religion sense.
Examples
"El estado secular no impone ninguna religión oficial."
Natural Translation
The secular state does not impose any official religion.
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