idiotism

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English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From idiot +‎ -ism.

Noun[edit]

idiotism (countable and uncountable, plural idiotisms)

  1. (now chiefly historical) Very severe mental retardation.
    • 1791 (date written), Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman: With Strictures on Political and Moral Subjects, 1st American edition, Boston, Mass.: [] Peter Edes for Thomas and Andrews, [], published 1792, →OCLC:
      He did not perceive that regal power, in a few generations, introduces idiotism into the noble stem []
    • 1997, Roy Porter, The Greatest Benefit to Mankind, Folio Society, published 2016, page 488:
      Idiotism had long been accepted as hopeless: ‘Absolute idiocy admits of no cure,’ noted the nineteenth-century psychiatrist George Man Burrows (1771–1846).
  2. A foolish utterance.
    • 1863, Sheridan Le Fanu, The House by the Churchyard:
      [] that clear soprano, in nursery, rings out a shower of innocent idiotisms over the half-stripped baby, and suspends the bawl upon its lips.

Etymology 2[edit]

From Latin idiotismus.

Noun[edit]

idiotism (plural idiotisms)

  1. Idiom.
  2. An overly literal translation of an idiom.

Romanian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from French idiotisme.

Noun[edit]

idiotism n (plural idiotisme)

  1. idiotism

Declension[edit]