demotic

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
12
Words With Friends
14
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/dɪˈmɒt.ɪk/(UK)
See all 2 pronunciations
/dɪˈmɒt.ɪk/(UK) · /dɪˈmɑ.tɪk/(US)

Definition of demotic

6 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Of or for the common people.
    “demotic writing style”
    “Anything grandiose or historically based tends to sound flat and banal when it reaches English, partly because translators get stuck between contradictory imperatives: juggling fidelity to the original sense with what is vocally viable, they tend to resort to a genteel fustian which lacks either poetic resonance or demotic realism, adding to a sense of artificiality rather than enhancing credibility.”
    “An enthusiastic literary critical response ranged from Graham Greene, who admired Byron’s demotic, conversational brilliance, to the rivalrous Evelyn Waugh, who had to concede the book’s high spirits, via the Sunday Times, which linked Byron to his namesake (no relation) and declared him “the last and finest fruit of the insolent humanism of the 18th century”.”
See all 6 definitions

adj

  1. (not-comparable)Of or for the common people.
    “demotic writing style”
    “Anything grandiose or historically based tends to sound flat and banal when it reaches English, partly because translators get stuck between contradictory imperatives: juggling fidelity to the original sense with what is vocally viable, they tend to resort to a genteel fustian which lacks either poetic resonance or demotic realism, adding to a sense of artificiality rather than enhancing credibility.”
    “An enthusiastic literary critical response ranged from Graham Greene, who admired Byron’s demotic, conversational brilliance, to the rivalrous Evelyn Waugh, who had to concede the book’s high spirits, via the Sunday Times, which linked Byron to his namesake (no relation) and declared him “the last and finest fruit of the insolent humanism of the 18th century”.”
  2. (not-comparable)Of, relating to, or written in the ancient Egyptian script that developed from Lower Egyptian hieratic writing starting from around 650 BCE and was chiefly used to write the Demotic phase of the Egyptian language, with simplified and cursive characters that no longer corresponded directly to their hieroglyphic precursors.
  3. (not-comparable)Of, relating to, or written in the form of modern vernacular Greek.
    “demotic Greek”

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)Language as spoken or written by the common people.
    “Near-synonym: vernacular”
    “2010, John C. Wells, accents map Note the intrusion into British demotic (“me and Cheryl were having”) of the valley-girl quotative be, like.”

name

  1. The demotic Egyptian script, used from c. 650 BCE to 452 CE.
    “Regarding the ranges of these palaeographic areas, the terms mentioned might again be misleading to a nonadept, who, for example, has to know that the Delta is mostly uncharted territory in regard to Demotic palaeography (due to the lack of sources from this area).”
  2. The demotic Egyptian language, spoken from c. 650 BCE to 400 BCE.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

First attested in 1822, from Ancient Greek δημοτικός (dēmotikós, “common”), from δημότης (dēmótēs, “commoner”), from δῆμος (dêmos, “the common people”).

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