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patrician

noun

  1. the name given to members of the old-established upper class in ancient Rome as well as in the Middle Ages
L325148 on Wikidata ↗

adjective

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L339143 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /pəˈtɹɪʃən/

adj

Etymology: Borrowed from Middle French patricien, from Latin patricius, derived from patrēs cōnscrīptī (“Roman senators”). May also have been derived from Latin patricius + -ian

  1. Of or pertaining to the Roman patres (“fathers”) or senators, or patricians.

    […] I ſee Th’ Inſulting Tyrant prancing o’er the Field Strow’d with Rome’s Citizens, and drench’d in Slaughter, His Horſe’s Hoofs wet with Patrician Blood.

    The cognomen was first used in patrician families, who were distinguished from the plebeians by their three names.

  2. Of or pertaining to a person of high birth; noble; not plebeian; aristocratic.

    born in the patrician file of society

  3. Characteristic of or appropriate to a person of high birth; classy.

    Hanks' taste in projects and directors is undoubtedly patrician and with a few exceptions like 1993's Philadelphia, the first mainstream film about the Aids crisis, rarely provocative

  4. Politically active to help people in lower classes, especially in a patronizing or condescending way.

    It will speed the shrivelling of the patrician “one nation” Tories, who tried to curb the extremes of Thatcherism and ended by providing its veils.

    Saint-Simon was certainly a radical, and hostile to inherited privilege, but his bourgeois 'socialism' was of a patrician kind. Science, being a firm and certain kind of knowledge, a 'religion of Newton' or 'cult of Reason' essentially plays the key role in his grand scheme for social engineering.

noun

Etymology: Borrowed from Middle French patricien, from Latin patricius, derived from patrēs cōnscrīptī (“Roman senators”). May also have been derived from Latin patricius + -ian

  1. A member of any of the families constituting the populus Romanus, or body of Roman citizens, before the development of the plebeian order; later, one who, by right of birth or by special privilege conferred, belonged to the senior class of Romans, who, with certain property, had by right a seat in the Roman Senate.

    Noble Patricians, Patrons of my right, / Defend the iuſtice of my Cauſe with Armes.

  2. A person of high birth; a nobleman.

    The emperor elevated several loyal families to the status of patricians.

  3. One familiar with the works of the Christian Fathers; one versed in patristic lore or life.