51Թ

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anthropophagy

[ an-thruh-pof-uh-jee ]

noun

  1. the eating of human flesh; cannibalism.


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Other 51Թ Forms

  • ·ٳ··󲹲· [an-thr, uh, -p, uh, -, faj, -ik, -, fey, -jik], ·ٳ··󲹲·· ·ٳ·DZ··dzܲ [an-thr, uh, -, pof, -, uh, -g, uh, s], adjective
  • t·DZ··dzܲ· adverb
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of anthropophagy1

First recorded in 1600–10; from French anthropophagie, from Late Latin ԳٳōDZ󲹲, from Greek ԳٳōDZ󲹲í; anthropo-, -phagy
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Their first act of anthropophagy was basically an accident.

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Controversy over ancient anthropophagy, or cannibalism, has raged in academia for more than a century.

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Antropofagia, or anthropophagy in English, refers to the eating of human flesh.

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By repurposing anthropophagy as image of cultural voraciousness, the artists in Tarsila’s circle were reclaiming the Brazilian past on new terms.

From

Cannibalism is when you kill someone, so technically this is what is known as anthropophagy.

From

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