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*In ], "infidel" is an ] now supplanted variously by "]", "]", "]" or "]". *In ], "infidel" is an ] now supplanted variously by "]", "]", "]" or "]".
*In ], an ] term ] as "]" is used for non-Muslims and is often translated as "infidel".

*In ], an ] term ] as "]" is used for atheists and the followers of other religions apart from the ] (generally taken to be Jews, Christians and Samaritans), and is often translated as "infidel". It may also be used in some contexts for Peoples of the Book.

*In ], "]" describes one who does not recognize the authority of the ], and "]", someone who does not follow the ] way of living.

*In ], "]" and "]" denote non-Jews and non-Israelites, respectively.


''(See ] for the ] computer ] from ].)'' ''(See ] for the ] computer ] from ].)''

Revision as of 23:55, 31 January 2006

An "infidel" is an unbeliever concerning central tenets of a religion, often used in a pejorative sense to describe those who explicitly deny them (especially regarding asserted aspects of a religion's deities). More generally, an infidel is one who doubts or rejects a particular (usually heirarchical) doctrine, system, or principle.

(See Infidel (computer game) for the 1983 computer text adventure from Infocom.)