noun
equal rights of citizenship, as in different communities; mutual political rights.
The Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 b.c.) was the first author to use 勳莽棗梯棗梭蘋喧梗穩硃 equality of civic rights. 梆莽棗梯棗梭蘋喧梗穩硃 applied to individuals and communities; it also meant reciprocity of such rights between states (as by treaty). 捩棗梭蘋喧梗穩硃 citizenship, daily life of a citizen, body of citizens; government, polity, constitution is a derivative of the noun 梯籀梭勳莽 citadel (of a city), city, ones city or country. 捩籀梭勳莽 comes the very complicated Proto-Indo-European root pel-, 梯梗梭-, 梯梭襲- citadel, fortified elevation, city. The same root yields the Sanskrit noun 梯贖娶 citadel, city (Singapur Singapore means Lion City), and Lithuanian 梯勳梭穫莽 citadel, castle. Isopolity entered English in the 19th century.
Isopolity agreements offered states and their citizens a way to share most fully in each other’s judicial systems, political processes, religious and cultural life, without giving up their prized mutual autonomy.
In the nineteenth century, the British lawyer and legal theorist A. V. Dicey proposed the creation of a common citizenship, or isopolity, between the United States and the United Kingdom.
adjective
narrow-minded and subjective; unwilling to understand another viewpoint.
The meanings of blinkered (of a horse) fitted with blinkers to restrict vision and (of a person) having a narrow, limited outlook are all but simultaneous, dating from the end of the 19th century.
These anti-fans see, in new casts and storylines, the agendas of blinkered Social Justice Warriors more interested in diversity quotas and Signaling Virtue than making good movies.
I felt my temperature rise at the thought of LaFramboise’s blinkered arrogance.
noun
an undistinguished imitator, follower, or successor of an important writer, painter, etc.
The English noun epigone ultimately comes from the Greek plural noun 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 offspring, posterity, literally (ones) born after or later, a noun use of the adjective 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗莽 born besides. The original, primary use of 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 was for the sons of the seven heroes who fought against Seven-Gated Thebes, traditionally a generation before the Trojan War. The secondary use of 梗梯穩眶棗紳棗勳 was for the heirs of the 餃勳獺餃棗釵堯棗勳 successors, i.e., Alexander the Greats (356-323 b.c.) generals (e.g., Ptolemy, Seleucus) who divided Alexanders conquests among themselves. The 餃勳獺餃棗釵堯棗勳 were very competent and their offspring far inferior, which is the modern meaning of epigone. Epigone entered English in the 19th century.
… is there anything lower than stealing from an epigone?
The palace was partly designed by a famous architect of the time, L籀pez i Porta, one of Gaudi’s epigones, and partly by Benvingut himself, which explains the labyrinthine, chaotic, indecisive layout of every storey in the building.