barbarian
Etymology
From Middle English barbarian, borrowed from Medieval Latin barbarinus (“Berber, pagan, foreigner”), from Latin barbaria (“foreign country”), from barbarus (“foreigner, savage”), from Ancient Greek βάρβαρος (bárbaros, “foreign, non-Greek, strange”), possibly onomatopoeic (mimicking foreign languages, akin to English blah blah). Cognate to Sanskrit बर्बर (barbara, “barbarian, non-Aryan, stammering, blockhead”).
adj
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Relating to people, countries, or customs perceived as uncivilized or inferior.
noun
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(historical) A non-Greek or a non-Roman citizen. -
An uncivilized or uncultured person, originally compared to the hellenistic Greco-Roman civilisation; often associated with fighting or other such shows of strength. -
(derogatory) A person destitute of culture; a Philistine. Shall a noble writer, and an inspired noble writer, be called a solecist, and barbarian, for giving a new turn to a word so agreeable to the analogy and genius of the Greek tongue? 1725, Anthony Blackwall, The Sacred Classics Defended And Illustrated -
(derogatory) Someone from a developing country or backward culture. -
A warrior, clad in fur or leather, associated with sword and sorcery stories. -
A cruel, savage, inhumane, brutal person; one without pity or empathy. Thou fell barbarian. 1712, Ambrose Philips, The Distrest Mother -
(derogatory) A foreigner, especially with barbaric qualities as in the above definitions.
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