bufferdom

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From buffer +‎ -dom.

Noun[edit]

bufferdom (uncountable)

  1. (UK) The state of being an ‘old buffer’, or a conservative, somewhat foolish old man.
    • 1994, Christopher Hitchens, ‘On Spanking’, London Review of Books, volume 16, number 20:
      Sometime in the late autumn of 1977, I went to a book party that was held in the Rosebery Room of the House of Lords. Why I went I can’t think – the volume was some piece of unreadable bufferdom extruded by Lord Butler […].
    • 2002 August 5, Mary Riddell, The New Statesman:
      Her predecessors, Stephen Tumim and David Ramsbotham, pillars of establishment bufferdom with impeccable social consciences, had enraged the Home Secretaries to whom they reported.
    • 2010 April 11, William Langley, The Telegraph:
      It would be tempting to see in Malcolm McLaren's final years the descent into amiable bufferdom of a once free spirit, and to conclude that the ---- Establishment always wins in the end.