antidisestablishmentarian

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Etymology === From anti- +‎ disestablishment +‎ -arian. === Pronunciation === === Noun === antidisestablishmentarian (plural antidisestablishmentarians) One who believes that the Church of England should retain its formal constitutional relationship with the state. [hapax legomenon from 19th c.] 1892, letter of Edward White Benson, quoted in James Anderson Carr, The life-work of Edward White Benson, D.D., sometime Archbishop of Canterbury. London: Elliot Stock, 1898. But the Free Kirk of the north of Scotland are strong anti-Disestablishmentarians. A meeting for Disestablishment can't be got up, even by popular Ministers. 1900 letter to Pall Mall Gazette A correspondent gives "nonintercommunicability" as the longest word In the English language. While reading the life of Archbishop Benson I came across the following extract from his diary for September, 1892 (page 411): "But the free kirk of the north of Scotland are strong antidisestablishmentarians"—ten syllables, twenty-six letters! ==== Translations ==== === Adjective === antidisestablishmentarian (comparative more antidisestablishmentarian, superlative most antidisestablishmentarian) Of or relating to the belief that the Church of England should retain its formal constitutional relationship with the state. === Related terms === antidisestablishmentarianism