Pickwickian
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Pickwick + -ian, from The Pickwick Papers (1836) by Charles Dickens, in which members of the Pickwick Club explain away unparliamentary language as having been uttered "in the Pickwickian sense".
Adjective
[edit]Pickwickian (comparative more Pickwickian, superlative most Pickwickian)
- arbitrary or meaningless (of the usage of a word or phrase)
- 1836, Charles Dickens, The Pickwick Papers:
- The Chairman felt it his imperative duty to demand of the honourable gentleman, whether he had used the expression which had just escaped him in a common sense. Mr. Blotton had no hesitation in saying that he had not—he had used the word in its Pickwickian sense.
- 1977, Christopher Derrick, Escape from Scepticism: Liberal Education As If Truth Mattered:
- But let us defend the poor battered old language against those who use words in private Pickwickian senses of their own […]
- 1995, John Hassard, Sociology and Organization Theory, page 80:
- But we are prisoners in a Pickwickian sense; if we try we can break out of our frameworks at any time.
- (medicine) Having, or relating to, Pickwickian syndrome.
- 1975, Morton F. Reiser, Organic disorders and psychosomatic medicine, volume 4, page 866:
- This pattern of EEG and respiratory changes has been observed during both diurnal and nocturnal sleep in Pickwickian patients.
- Of or relating to The Pickwick Papers, its storyline, or its characters (chiefly Mr Pickwick himself).
- 1960, George Frederick McCleary, On detective fiction and other things, page 60:
- Calverley's test of Pickwickian scholarship has been followed by similar tests with which students of the Holmesian chronicles may put their knowledge of their hero's exploits to the proof.