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单词 highbrow
释义

highbrowadj.n.

Brit. /ˈhʌɪbraʊ/, U.S. /ˈhaɪˌbraʊ/
Origin: Formed within English, by compounding. Etymons: high adj., brow n.1
Etymology: < high adj. + brow n.1 Compare earlier high-browed adj. 2.
colloquial. Occasionally somewhat depreciative.Sometimes opposed to lowbrow and middlebrow.
A. adj.
1. Of the nature of or characterized by high culture; rarefied; intellectually demanding.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [adjective]
intellectual1732
bluestocking1832
long-haired1842
intellectualist1857
high-browed1876
highbrow1884
intellectualistic1887
minority1930
egg-headed1957
eggheadish1963
1884 L. Troubridge Diary July in J. Hope-Nicholson Life amongst Troubridges (1966) xii. 169 Mr. Hope had suggested that we would be at some highbrow part of the Exhibition—looking at pictures I think.
1925 Punch 22 Apr. 437/2 ‘The programmes are too highbrow,’ I maintained. ‘They are hopelessly beyond the intelligence of the mass, at any rate.’
1971 N. Brown Antarctic Housewife iv. 20 The selection of books in the bookcase proclaimed Dr. Burien to be a man of culture, and the impression was confirmed when he..proceeded to play a selection of highbrow music.
2011 C. Taylor Londoners 45 I started off doing some very highbrow stuff for the BBC—poetry and prose reading.
2. Originally U.S. Of a person: highly intellectual or cultured.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > humanistic studies > [adjective] > cultured
polite1601
improved1617
cultivated1645
well-cultured1760
cultured1777
high-minded1827
highbrow1908
kulturny1955
1908 Evening Telegram (Elyria, Ohio) 20 June 5/3 The popular primary and other schemes of the highbrow reformers.
1931 R. Church High Summer 12 Mother insists on my being highbrow and visiting all the historical places.
1957 London Mag. Jan. 48 I could imagine myself a brisk and efficient technocrat, a kind of highbrow tycoon.
2009 Spin July 96/2 David plays a highbrow Manhattan crankypants and Wood the young nymph besotted with him.
B. n.
Originally U.S. A highly intellectual or cultured person; a person with sophisticated taste.Sometimes in negative sense, with implications of intellectual snobbery or superciliousness.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [noun] > intellectual person
illuminate1602
intellectualist1605
intelligence1648
intellectual1652
aerialist1778
intellect1842
intellectuality1863
cerebralist1890
highbrow1898
longhair1920
egghead1952
boffin1954
boff1984
1898 Philadelphia Inquirer 4 June 14/4 (headline) The highbrow's Happy idea... ‘I am starving!’ moaned the unfortunate genius, sinking to the attic floor.
1934 S. R. Nelson All about Jazz i. 18 The strangely disreputable lady ‘Jazz’—disreputable because she was not sponsored by the highbrows.
1955 Times 23 June 11/4 The highbrows in those parts all go up in smoke or mist if you confess to liking those among their native artists who seem most typically Scottish.
1998 K. Lette Altar Ego xvii. 157 Julian, on the other hand, is a highbrow... The guy's a poetry-quoting brainiac.

Derivatives

ˈhighbrowish adj. = sense A. 1; (also) somewhat or rather highbrow.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [adjective] > fairly, extremely
highbrowish1912
1912 Jrnl. Proc. & Addr. 50th Ann. Meeting (National Educ. Assoc.) 252 The communities that most need awakening are incapable of finding utility or amusement in these rather sophisticated and ‘highbrowish’ affairs.
1926 P. Whiteman & M. M. McBride Jazz viii. 108 Does the very word ‘classical’ make you nervous because it sounds so highbrowish?
2005 A. Liberman Word Origins iv. 33 Those who find tenebrous unbearably highbrowish may take comfort in Longfellow's translation of Dante.
ˈhighbrowism n. the condition or fact of being highbrow.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [noun]
intellectualityc1465
intellectualness1667
highbrowism1908
1908 Collier's 6 June 13/1 Mr. Percy Mackaye's poetic tragedy, ‘Sappho and Phaon’, was one of the things which was fairly open, it seems to me, to the deprecation of highbrowism.
1937 John o' London's Weekly 1 Jan. 585/1 I am incapable of ‘highbrowism’, I make no pretensions to be a literary critic.
1993 Guardian 1 Sept. i. 3/2 That makes them very useful in a country with no tradition of highbrowism.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2014; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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adj.n.1884
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