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Synonyms for pedantry


Grammar : Noun
Spell : ped-n-tree
Phonetic Transcription : ˈpɛd n tri



Définition of pedantry

Origin :
  • 1610s, from Italian pedanteria, from pedante, or from French pédanterie, from pédant (see pedant).
  • noun sophistry
Example sentences :
  • Pedantry and affectation began to take the place of boldness and strength.
  • Extract from : « Chinese Painters » by Raphael Petrucci
  • His classical attainments, if not florid, were liberal, and free from pedantry.
  • Extract from : « The English Spy » by Bernard Blackmantle
  • Our society is free from pedantry; and there—no damage can result where no one's the wiser.
  • Extract from : « An Outcast » by F. Colburn Adams
  • Once our profession becomes all absorbing it hardens into pedantry.
  • Extract from : « A Preface to Politics » by Walter Lippmann
  • When he writes of ships he does not tease us with the pedantry of technical terms.
  • Extract from : « Suspended Judgments » by John Cowper Powys
  • They have to us an air of formality, a slight dash of pedantry.
  • Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 385. November, 1847. » by Various
  • Gossip preferable to pedantry, 63;seven centuries off, 92, 97.
  • Extract from : « Past and Present » by Thomas Carlyle
  • Patriotism is suspected, and sometimes sinks almost to pedantry.
  • Extract from : « The Prime Minister » by Anthony Trollope
  • The dogmatism and pedantry upon which it is based are easily confuted.
  • Extract from : « American Sketches » by Charles Whibley
  • Yet even his devotion to culture was not free from pedantry and dilettantism.
  • Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 15, Slice 5 » by Various

Antonyms for pedantry

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