clerisy

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Introduced by Coleridge, based on German Clerisei (modern Klerisei), from Late Latin clēricus.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

clerisy (countable and uncountable, plural clerisies)

  1. An elite group of intellectuals; learned people, the literati.
    • 2003: By the nineteenth-century clerisy [] Christianity itself, yoked to material civilization, came to be questioned as gross and vulgar. — Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason (Penguin 2004, p. 432)
    • 2016: Only the highly educated write so badly. Indeed, the point of such ludicrous prose is to signal membership in a closed clerisy that possesses a private language. — George F. Will, Washington Post, 18 Nov, 2016
    • 2022: We invent ourselves as American writers—it's not a clerisy we’re born into... — Edward Hirsch, The Heart of American Poetry (Library of America, 2022)
  2. The clergy, or their opinions, as opposed to the laity.
    • 1986, Kenneth Rexroth, Bradford Morrow, Classics Revisited, page 174:
      Few men have ever had a stronger conviction of their clerisy, of their belonging to the clerkly caste of the responsibles.

Synonyms[edit]

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