all-becrushing
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]all- + be- + crushing, nonce coinage by S. T. Coleridge to render Mendelssohn's alleszermalmend, in reference to Kant.
Adjective
[edit]all-becrushing (comparative more all-becrushing, superlative most all-becrushing)
- crushing all
- 1817, S. T. Coleridge, Biographia Literaria:
- the striking but untranslatable epithet, which the celebrated Mendelssohn applied to the great founder of the Critical Philosophy "Der alleszermalmende Kant," that is, the all-becrushing, or rather the all-to-nothing-crushing Kant.
- 1990, Andrei Navrozov, The Times, Saturday May 5, 1990:
- providing its author – unlike the Red Star – with equal space for an allbecrushing reply.