From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcatholiccath‧o‧lic /ˈkæθəlɪk/ adjective VARIOUS/OF DIFFERENT KINDSincluding a very wide variety of things She has catholic tastes (=likes a lot of different things). a catholic collection of records
Examples from the Corpus
catholic• He certainly felt that the culture of the state should reflect the fact that it was 93 percent Roman catholic.• I became catholic in my lusts.catholic tastes• an artist with catholic tastes• It seemed that whoever lived here had catholic tastes.• There's plenty of evidence of Ralph's catholic tastes in collecting.CatholicCatholic adjective RRCconnected with the Roman Catholic Church —Catholic noun [countable] —Catholicism /kəˈθɒlɪsɪzəm $ kəˈθɑː-/ noun [uncountable]Examples from the Corpus
Catholic• Remember the lesson of Northern Ireland, where Protestant and Catholic children have long been taught to hate each other.• There was a deep sense of prayer, an opportunity for reflection and an enjoyment in discovering more about our Catholic faith.• At one time not a single priest lived in Catholic Maryland.• Whether Terence O'Neill was committed to promoting the sorts of reforms which might have satisfied the Catholic minority is unknown.• Silvio Berlusconi and a group of Catholic parties want a widely based government to work on constitutional changes.• After a while my hands smelled like an old-time Catholic school lunch room on a hot Friday.• a Catholic schoolOrigin catholic (1300-1400) French catholique, from Late Latin, from Greek katholikos “general, universal”, from katholou “in general”, from kata “by” + holos “whole”