adoxographer
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From adoxography + -er.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /eɪdɒkˈsɒɡɹəfə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /eɪdɑkˈsɑɡɹəfɚ/
- Hyphenation: adox‧og‧ra‧pher
Noun
[edit]adoxographer (plural adoxographers)
- (rhetoric) One who composes adoxography.
- 2005, John W. Velz, “Adoxography as Mode of Discourse for Satan and His Underlings in Medieval Plays”, in Clifford Davidson, editor, The Dramatic Tradition of the Middle Ages [AMS Studies in the Middle Ages; 26], New York, N.Y.: AMS Press, →ISBN, page 100:
- 2008, T. Ross Leasure, “Spenser's Diabolical Orator and Milton's 'Man of Hell'”, in Christophe Tournu, editor, Milton in France, Bern: Peter Lang, →ISBN, page 167:
- Loki proves himself an accomplished sophist – one that may be more precisely defined as an adoxographer (from the Greek, adoxos, meaning "ignoble") who, by rhetorical means, convincingly inverts the presumed categories of noble and ignoble action. It should come as no surprise that the practitioner of such rhetoric here is an angel fallen from grace since, traditionally, those sophists who constitute adoxographers are frequently of the demonic ilk.