secular
Pronunciation: /ˈsɛkjʊlə/
adjective
- 1not connected with religious or spiritual matters: secular buildings secular attitudes to deathContrasted with sacred.
- 2 Christian Church (of clergy) not subject to or bound by religious rule; not belonging to or living in a monastic or other order. Contrasted with regular.


Origin:
Middle English: secular (sense 1 of the adjective), secular (sense 2 of the adjective) from Old French seculer, from Latin saecularis, from saeculum 'generation, age', used in Christian Latin to mean 'the world' (as opposed to the Church); secular (sense 3 of the adjective), secular (sense 4 of the adjective), secular (sense 5 of the adjective) (early 19th century) from Latin saecularis 'relating to an age or period'