doctiloquent
English
Etymology
Coined from Latin doctī + loquēns, from genitive of doceō (“I teach”) + present participle of loquor (“I speak”). Compare eloquent.
Adjective
doctiloquent (comparative more doctiloquent, superlative most doctiloquent)
- (rare) Speaking learnedly.
- 1989, Journal of Canadian Poetry, p. 172:
- Written in a spirit of conservation, Aestheticism and the Canadian Modernists is doctiloquent in a manner no longer quite fashionable.
- 1992, Utopian Studies, Journal of the Society for Utopian Studies, Volume 3, Issue 1, p. 187:
- It is a magisterial, doctiloquent guidebook, written with a care to ensure that readers never lose sight of its thesis or drift too far out of soundings.
- 1989, Journal of Canadian Poetry, p. 172:
Usage notes
Very rare and self-conscious, more often defined than used.
Synonyms
- See also Thesaurus:learned
See also
References
- American Speech, Volume 2, University of Alabama Press, 1927, p. 420: ‘60. Doctiloquent. “that speaks learnedly”’
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