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单词 aristocracy
释义

aristocracy


aristocracy

rule by elite or privileged upper class: The governing body was composed of the country’s most powerful aristocracy.
Not to be confused with:anarchy – the absence of laws or government: The fall of the empire was followed by chaos and anarchy.democracy – government by the people: The United States is a democracy. oligarchy – government by the few: The citizens have no voice in an oligarchy. plutocracy – government in which the wealthy class rules: In a plutocracy, there is little regard for the poor.

ar·is·toc·ra·cy

A0423100 (ăr′ĭ-stŏk′rə-sē)n. pl. ar·is·toc·ra·cies 1. A hereditary ruling class; nobility.2. a. Government by a ruling class.b. A state or country having this form of government.3. a. Government by the citizens deemed to be best qualified to lead.b. A state having such a government.4. A group or class considered superior to others.
[Late Latin aristocratia, government by the best, from Greek aristokratiā : aristos, best; see ar- in Indo-European roots + -kratiā, -cracy.]

aristocracy

(ˌærɪˈstɒkrəsɪ) n, pl -cies1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a privileged class of people usually of high birth; the nobility2. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) such a class as the ruling body of a state3. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) government by such a class4. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a state governed by such a class5. a class of people considered to be outstanding in a sphere of activity[C16: from Late Latin aristocratia, from Greek aristokratia rule by the best-born, from aristos best; see -cracy]

ar•is•toc•ra•cy

(ˌær əˈstɒk rə si)

n., pl. -cies. 1. a class of persons holding exceptional rank and privileges, esp. the hereditary nobility. 2. a government or state ruled by an aristocracy, elite, or privileged upper class. 3. government by the best or most able people in the state. 4. a governing body composed of the best or most able people. 5. any class or group regarded as superior because of education, ability, or wealth. [1555–65; (< Middle French aristocratie) < Medieval Latin aristocracia < Greek aristokratía=aristo(s) best, noblest + -kratia -ceacy]

aristocracy

1. government by the best people.
2. an upper class based on quality, nobility, etc.
See also: Society

Aristocracy

 the nobles or chief officials in a state; the privileged class.Example: aristocracy is the ruling body of the best citizens, 1531.

aristocracy

A ruling class which inherits wealth, special privileges, and titles; typically accompanied by a monarchy.
Thesaurus
Noun1.aristocracy - a privileged class holding hereditary titlesaristocracy - a privileged class holding hereditary titlesnobilityelite, elite group - a group or class of persons enjoying superior intellectual or social or economic statusnoblesse - members of the nobility (especially of the French nobility)baronage, peerage - the peers of a kingdom considered as a groupbaronetage - the collective body of baronetsknighthood - aristocrats holding the rank of knightsamurai - feudal Japanese military aristocracyaristocrat, blue blood, patrician - a member of the aristocracy
2.aristocracy - the most powerful members of a societyaristocracy - the most powerful members of a societygentryupper class, upper crust - the class occupying the highest position in the social hierarchylanded gentry, squirearchy - the gentry who own land (considered as a class)

aristocracy

noun upper class, elite, nobility, gentry, peerage, ruling class, patricians, upper crust (informal), noblesse (literary), haut monde (French), patriciate, body of nobles a member of the aristocracy
masses, working classes, lower classes, commoners, proletariat, common people, hoi polloi, plebs, plebeians, proles (derogatory slang, chiefly Brit.)Quotations
"An aristocracy in a republic is like a chicken whose head has been cut off; it may run about in a lively way, but in fact it is dead" [Nancy Mitford Noblesse Oblige]
"There is a natural aristocracy among men. The grounds of this are virtue and talent" [Thomas Jefferson Letter to John Adams]

aristocracy

nounPeople of the highest social level:blue blood, crème de la crème, elite, flower, gentility, gentry, nobility, patriciate, quality, society, upper class, who's who.Informal: upper crust.
Translations
贵族

aristocracy

(ӕrəˈstokrəsi) noun in some countries, the nobility and others of the highest social class, who usually own land. 貴族階級 贵族ˈaristocrat (-krӕt) , ((American) əˈristəkrӕt) noun a member of the aristocracy. 貴族(成員) 贵族中的一员ˌaristoˈcratic (-ˈkrӕ-) , ((American) əˌristəˈkrӕtik) adjective (of people, behaviour etc) proud and noble-looking. an aristocratic manner. 貴族般的 贵族式的ˌaristoˈcratically adverb 貴族般地 贵族式地
IdiomsSeecodfish aristocracy

aristocracy


aristocracy

(ăr'ĭstŏk`rəsē) [Gr.,=rule by the best], in political science, government by a social elite. In the West the political concept of aristocracy derives from Plato's formulation in the Republic. The criteria on which aristocracy is based may vary greatly from society to society. Historically, aristocracies have usually rested on landed property, have invoked heredity, and, despite frequent conflicts with the throne, have flourished chiefly within the framework of monarchymonarchy,
form of government in which sovereignty is vested in a single person whose right to rule is generally hereditary and who is empowered to remain in office for life.
..... Click the link for more information.
. Aristocracy may be based on wealth as well as land, as in ancient Carthage and medieval Venice, or may be a theocracy like the Brahman caste in India. Other criteria can be age, race, military prowess, or cultural attainment. The best example of a modern landowning aristocracy that conducted government was in England from 1688 to 1832. A resurgence by the French aristocracy in the 18th cent. was ended by the French Revolution, which abolished most of the privileges on which it was based. Inflation, which cut into the fixed income of the aristocracy, the loss of the traditional military role of the aristocracy, and the rise of industry and decline in the importance of landed property have all worked against the aristocracy. Today the political power of traditional western aristocracy has all but disappeared.

Bibliography

See J. H. Kautsky, The Politics of Aristocratic Empires (1982).

aristocracy

  1. (in classical Greece) ‘the rule of the best’.
  2. a hereditary élite or noble class, e.g. the noble class in FEUDALISM. In most large-scale, premodern societies a tendency existed for the ruling or dominant classes to transform themselves into a hereditary noble class, but counter tendencies also existed in which such claims could be resisted. See also PATRIMONIALISM.
While sense 2 is more usual, the term may be used in something like its earlier Greek sense, e.g. as in LABOUR ARISTOCRACY. aristocracy of labour see LABOUR ARISTOCRACY.

Aristocracy

 

(1) A form of government under which state power is retained by a privileged noble minority. As a form of government, aristocracy stands in opposition to monarchy and democracy. “A monarchy is the power of a single person, a republic is the absence of any nonelected authority, an aristocracy is the power of a relatively small minority, and a democracy is the power of the people. . . . All these differences arose in the epoch of slavery. Despite these differences, the state of the slave-owning epoch was a slave-owning state, irrespective of whether it was a monarchy or a republic, aristocratic or democratic” (V. I. Lenin, Collected Works, vol. 29, p. 479). In the history of political ideas, the concept of aristocracy as the designation of one form of state government originated with Plato and Aristotle; later Polybius, Spinoza, Hobbes, Montesquieu, Kant, and others favored the aristocratic form of government. As a rule, the justification for aristocracy propounded by its adherents comes down to the idea of the political inferiority of the majority of the people over whom the aristocratic elite is called to rule. In ancient times aristocratic republics included Sparta, Rome (from the sixth to first centuries B.C.), and Carthage; in medieval Europe, Venice and the Pskov and Novgorod feudal republics.

The composition and order of formation of the highest bodies of state power and the interrelation between them varied in different aristocracies. For example, in Sparta state power was in the hands of two hereditary kings, the gerusia (council of elders elected by the popular assembly), and the ephors. In Rome members of the senate were appointed by the censor from among former high officials and members of distinguished families; the elite provided “elected” magistrates (the consuls, praetors, censors, and aediles). In Carthage two elected suffetes and an elected council of elders held the real power. In Novgorod and Pskov the council of lords was made up of the town patriciate.

In aristocracies the power of the popular assemblies was curtailed and their role was slight. The populace did not participate actively in state life. Elections were largely for show, and officials were the henchmen of the elite (the Spartiatai in Sparta, the patricians in Rome, and the patriciate in the medieval republics). In the formation of the organs of state power in an aristocracy from a circumscribed elite, there was a very strong tendency toward the principle of hereditary rule.

(2) The nobility; the privileged part of any class (the patricians in Rome, the eupatridae in Athens, the dvorianstvo [nobility or gentry], and others); or a social group (for example, the financial aristocracy) which enjoys special rights and benefits. The political influence of the aristocracy and the circle of people belonging to it is determined by the concrete historical conditions and peculiarities of the country in question. For example, the Junker class in 19th-century Prussia included only individuals from the old nobility related to royal, ducal, and other such families. In France and Great Britain, where many powerful feudal lords perished during internecine wars or bourgeois revolutions or else were destroyed by the policy of absolutism, the aristocracy was composed of less high-born nobility.

V. S. NERSESIANTS

Aristocracy

Almanach de GothaGerman social register. [Ger. Lit.: Benét, 26]Beaucaire, Monsieurportrays English aristocracy as shallow, inept snobs. [Am. Lit.: Monsieur Beaucaire, Magill I, 616–617]blue bloodsaid to flow in the veins of the nobility. [Western Cult.: Brewer Dictionary]Brahminappellation accorded members of old, “aristocratic” New England families. [Am. Hist.: EB, II: 226]Cabala, Theportrays wealthy esoterics, mysteriously influential in governmental affairs. [Am. Lit.: The Cabala]First Families of Virginiaelite families of prestigious rank. [Am. Usage: Misc.]Four Hundred,the social elite; the number of people Mrs. Astor could accommodate in her ballroom. [Am. Usage: Misc.]gold on whitesymbol of elite class. [Chinese Art: Jobes, 357]Junkers Prussianelite. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 387]Social Registerbook listing names and addresses of social elite. [Am. Usage: Misc.]St. Aubert, Emilyyoung French woman of wealth and position. [Br. Lit.: The Mysteries of Udolpho, Magill I, 635–638]WinthropEnglish upper-class family; America’s parliamentary governors. [Am. Hist.: Hart, 937–938]

aristocracy

1. a privileged class of people usually of high birth; the nobility 2. such a class as the ruling body of a state 3. government by such a class 4. a state governed by such a class

Aristocracy


ARISTOCRACY. That form of government in which the sovereign power isexercised by a small number of persons to the exclusion of the remainder ofthe people.

aristocracy


  • noun

Synonyms for aristocracy

noun upper class

Synonyms

  • upper class
  • elite
  • nobility
  • gentry
  • peerage
  • ruling class
  • patricians
  • upper crust
  • noblesse
  • haut monde
  • patriciate
  • body of nobles

Antonyms

  • masses
  • working classes
  • lower classes
  • commoners
  • proletariat
  • common people
  • hoi polloi
  • plebs
  • plebeians
  • proles

Synonyms for aristocracy

noun people of the highest social level

Synonyms

  • blue blood
  • crème de la crème
  • elite
  • flower
  • gentility
  • gentry
  • nobility
  • patriciate
  • quality
  • society
  • upper class
  • who's who
  • upper crust

Synonyms for aristocracy

noun a privileged class holding hereditary titles

Synonyms

  • nobility

Related Words

  • elite
  • elite group
  • noblesse
  • baronage
  • peerage
  • baronetage
  • knighthood
  • samurai
  • aristocrat
  • blue blood
  • patrician

noun the most powerful members of a society

Synonyms

  • gentry

Related Words

  • upper class
  • upper crust
  • landed gentry
  • squirearchy
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更新时间:2024/12/22 19:10:20