Поиск в словарях
Искать во всех

Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary - ignoramus

 
 

Связанные словари

Ignoramus

ignoramus
 noun  (plural -muses; also ignorami)  Etymology: Ignoramus, ignorant lawyer in Ignoramus (1615), play by George Ruggle, from Latin, literally, we are ignorant of  Date: circa 1616 an utterly ignorant person ; dunce
Рейтинг статьи:
Комментарии:

См. в других словарях

1.
  n. (pl. ignoramuses) an ignorant person. Etymology: L, = we do not know: in legal use (formerly of a grand jury rejecting a bill) we take no notice of it; mod. sense perh. from a character in Ruggle's Ignoramus (1615) exposing lawyers' ignorance ...
Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference
2.
  1. невежа, неуч 2. юр. "дело прекратить за отсутствием состава преступления" ...
Новый большой англо-русский словарь
3.
  lat. noun pl. -es невежда ...
Англо-русский словарь
4.
  (ignoramuses) If you describe someone as an ignoramus, you are being critical of them because they do not have the knowledge you think they ought to have. (FORMAL) N-COUNT c darkgreen]disapproval ...
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary
5.
  ~ n plural ignoramuses someone who does not know about things that most people know about ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
6.
  - 1577, Anglo-Fr. legal term, from L. ignoramus "we do not know," first person present indicative of ignorare "not to know" (see ignore). The legal term was one a grand jury could write on a bill when it considered the prosecution's evidence insufficient. Sense of "ignorant person" came from the title role of George Ruggle's 1615 play satirizing the ignorance of common lawyers. ...
Английский Этимологический словарь

Вопрос-ответ:

Ссылка для сайта или блога:
Ссылка для форума (bb-код):

Самые популярные термины

1
1644
2
1488
3
1246
4
1245
5
1135
6
1093
7
1029
8
1015
9
1014
10
980
11
978
12
949
13
937
14
920
15
855
16
818
17
813
18
795
19
784
20
752