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1184 entries found
utopian (adj.)
1550s, with reference to More's fictional country; 1610s as "extravagantly ideal, impossibly visionary," from
utopia
+
-an
. As a noun meaning "visionary idealist" it is recorded by 1832 (also in this sense was
utopiast
, 1845).
Utopian socialism
is from 1849, originally pejorative, in reference to the Paris uprising of 1848; also a dismissive term in communist jargon, in reference to the ideas of Fourier, St. Simon, and Owen, "the pre-scientific and infantile stage" of modern, practical socialism.
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utopianism (n.)
1783, from
utopian
+
-ism
.
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utter (v.)
"speak, say," c. 1400, in part from Middle Dutch
uteren
or Middle Low German
utern
"to turn out, show, speak," from
uter
"outer," comparative adjective from
ut
"out" (see
utter
(adj.)); in part from Middle English verb
outen
"to disclose," from Old English
utan
"to put out," from
ut
(see
out
(v.)). Compare German
äussern
"to utter, express," from
aus
"out;" and colloquial phrase
out with it
"speak up!" Formerly also used as a commercial verb (as
release
is now). Related:
Uttered
;
uttering
.
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utter (adj.)
Old English
utera
,
uterra
, "outer, exterior, external," from Proto-Germanic
*utizon
(source also of Old Norse
utar
, Old Frisian
uttra
, Middle Dutch
utere
, Dutch
uiter-
, Old High German
uzar
, German
äußer
"outer"), comparative adjective from
ut
(see
out
(adv.)). Meaning "complete, total" (i.e. "going to the utmost point") is from early 15c.
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utterance (n.)
"that which is uttered," c. 1400, from
utter
(v.) +
-ance
.
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utterly (adv.)
early 13c., "truly, plainly, outspokenly," from
utter
(v.) +
-ly
(1); meaning "to an absolute degree" is late 14c., from
utter
(adj.)). Cf similarly formed German
äusserlich
. Old English
uterlic
(adj.) meant "external."
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uttermost (adj.)
late 14c., from
utter
(adj.) +
-most
. More recent than
utmost
. Compare
utmost
. Middle English also had
uttermore
(late 14c.), now, alas, no longer with us.
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UVÂ
abbreviation of
ultraviolet
, by 1928.
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uvea (n.)
late 14c., from medical Latin
uvea
, from Latin
uva
"grape; uvula" (see
uvula
). Partial loan-translation of Greek
hrago-eides (khiton)
"(the covering) resembling berries or grapes" (Galen). Related:
Uveal
.
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uvula (n.)
late 14c., from Late Latin
uvula
, from Latin
uvola
"small bunch of grapes," diminutive of
uva
"grape," from PIE root
*og-
"fruit, berry." So called from fancied resemblance of the organ to small grapes. Related:
Uvular
.
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