dogma: means something about a little ugly duckling that never got no dates he grew with a social life like the pope
The following content is taken from a website of a similar nature and is not my own answer
dogmatic \dog*mat"ic\ (d[o^]g*m[a^]t"[i^]k), n. One of an ancient sect of physicians who went by general principles; -- opposed to the Empiric. dogmatic
Source: The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
dogmatic \dog*mat"ic\ (d[o^]g*m[a^]t"[i^]k), dogmatical \dog*mat`ic*al\ (d[o^]g*m[a^]t"[i^]*kal), a. [L. dogmaticus, Gr. dogmatiko`s, fr. do`gma: cf. F. dogmatique.]
1. Pertaining to a dogma, or to an established and authorized doctrine or tenet. [1913 Webster]
2. Asserting a thing positively and authoritatively; positive; magisterial; hence, arrogantly authoritative; overbearing. [1913 Webster]
Critics write in a positive, dogmatic way. -- Spectator. [1913 Webster]
[They] are as assertive and dogmatical as if they were omniscient. -- Glanvill. [1913 Webster]
Dogmatic theology. Same as Dogmatics.
Syn: Magisterial; arrogant. See Magisterial. [1913 Webster]
Source: The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
133 Moby Thesaurus words for "dogmatic": Sabbatarian, a priori, antiblack, arbitrary, arrogant, assertive, assured, authoritarian, authoritative, balking, balky, believing, biased, bigoted, blind, bulldogged, bulletheaded, bullheaded, canonical, case-hardened, categorical, certain, chauvinistic, colored, conceited, confessional, confident, convinced, creedal, creedbound, deaf, deducible, derivable, devout, dictatorial, doctrinaire, doctrinal, doctrinarian, dogged, dogmatizing, domineering, doubtless, emphatic, evangelical, faithful, fanatic, fideistic, fundamentalist, hardheaded, headstrong, hidebound, hyperorthodox, imperious, impressed with, influenced, insistent, interested, intolerant, jaundiced, know-nothing, literalist, literalistic, magisterial, mulish, nonobjective, obdurate, obstinate, one-sided, opinionated, opinionative, opinioned, oracular, overbearing, overzealous, partial, partisan, peremptory, persevering, persuaded, pertinacious, pietistic, pigheaded, pious, pistic, pontifical, positive, positivistic, precisianist, precisianistic, prejudiced, prepossessed, pronunciative, purist, puristic, puritanical, pushy, racist, reasoned, restive, satisfied, secure, self-opinionated, self-opinioned, self-willed, set, sexist, sold on, staunch, stiff-necked, straitlaced, strict, strong-willed, strongheaded, stubborn, sulky, sullen, superpatriotic, sure, swayed, tenacious, twisted, ultranationalist, uncooperative, under the impression, undetached, undispassionate, undoubtful, undoubting, unpersuadable, unregenerate, warped, willful, xenophobic
Source: Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
dogmatic adj
1: characterized by arrogant assertion of unproved or unprovable principles [syn: dogmatical]
2: relating to or involving dogma; "dogmatic writings"
Source: WordNet (r) 2.0
Dogmatic \Dog*mat"ic\, n. One of an ancient sect of physicians who went by general principles; -- opposed to the Empiric.
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Dogmatic \Dog*mat"ic\, Dogmatical \Dog*mat`ic*al\, a. [L. dogmaticus, Gr. ?, fr. ?: cf. F. dogmatique.]
1. Pertaining to a dogma, or to an established and authorized doctrine or tenet.
2. Asserting a thing positively and authoritatively; positive; magisterial; hence, arrogantly authoritative; overbearing.
Critics write in a positive, dogmatic way. -- Spectator.
[They] are as assertive and dogmatical as if they were omniscient. -- Glanvill.
Dogmatic theology. Same as Dogmatics.
Syn: Magisterial; arrogant. See Magisterial.
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
The meaning of the word dogmatic is to lay down principles as incontrovertibly true.
science is pragmatic not dogmatic
hardline - uncompromising, dogmatic
Dogmatic
Im dogmatic about my food
The law is dogmatic and will hopefully remain unapproved.
She was so dogmatic about what her friend was wearing.
A dogmatic person is a strongly opinionated person.
Mathematicians are not dogmatic. You are confusing them with theologians.
One sentence using dogmatic could be, It is difficult to have a conversation with someone who is dogmatic. Dogmatic means that a person has such a strong conviction about their point of view that they believe that they are always correct.
She left her church because she found the pastor's theology too dogmatic. The word dogmatic is an adjective.
his dogmatic response towards homosexuals was very insulting
Adjectives that mean the same as dogmatic (having a fixed belief) are arbitrary, inflexible, or uncompromising. Words that could mean the same as dogma (principle) are belief, precept, and canon.