• Timonist

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /ˈtaɪmÉ™nɪst/

    Origin

    Timon + -ist, from the 5th-century BC person Timon of Athens (as described by Plutarch, Lucian, Aristophanes). Used by Robert Greene in his Greene's Mourning Garment (1590). (Shakespeare's play Timon of Athens is usually estimated c. 1607 and would not have influenced Greene; however, some

    consider the play could be one of Shakepeare's earliests, and could then have been Greene's source.)

    Full definition of Timonist

    Noun

    Timonist

    (plural Timonists)
    1. A sort of bitter misanthrope related to Timonism, like Timon of Athens.
      • 1590, Robert Greene, Greene's Mourning Garment:See OED.''Yet was he not ... such a Timonist, but hee would familiarly con
    uerse with his friends. sic''
      • 1602, Thomas Dekker, Satiromastix:I did it to retyre me from the world; And turne my Muse into a Timonist. sic
      • 1988, Paul Ollswang, "Cynicism":Paul Ollswang, "Cynicism: A Series of Cartoons on a Philosophical Theme", January 1988, page at official site; repr. in The Best Comics of the Decade 1980-1990 Vol. 1, Seattle: Fantagraphics Books, 1990, ISBN 1-56097-035-9, p. 23. Cynicism is often contrasted with "Timonism" (cf. Shakespeare's Timon of Athens). Cynics saw what people could be & were angered by what they had become; Timonists felt humans were hopelessly stupid & uncaring by nature & so saw no hope for change.

    Adjective

    Timonist

    1. Of a form of bitter misanthropy related to Timonism, like Timon of Athens.
      • 1988, Maurice Charney, Hamlet's fictions:Maurice Charney, Hamlet's fictions, Routledge, 1988, ISBN 0415007038, p. 154 at Google Books.Marston poses as the Timonist malcontent satirist ready to excoriate the world for its follies.

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