athenaeum
Appearance
See also: athenæum
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin Athenaeum, from Ancient Greek Ἀθηναῖον (Athēnaîon), from Ἀθήνη (Athḗnē, “Athene”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]athenaeum (plural athenaeums or athenaea)
- Alternative form of Athenaeum: a temple primarily dedicated to Athena or her Roman equivalent Minerva.
- An association for the advancement of learning, particularly in science or literature.
- 1994 June 3, Michael Miner, “Will This Man Save Inland Architect?/A Simple Process”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
- A panel of architects who might loosely be described as the local athenaeum of their profession are awaiting, anxiously, the next edition of the bimonthly journal that bears their names.
- The reading room or library of such an association; (by extension) any reading room or library.
- 1921, Christopher Morley, Plum Pudding[2]:
- And this, too, may have been not unconnected with the gracious influence of the other sex as exhibited in a neighbouring athenaeum; and was accompanied by a gruesome spate of florid lyrics: some (happily) secret, and some exposed with needless hardihood in a college magazine.
- A literary or scientific periodical, especially one similar to the London Athenaeum.
Translations
[edit]an association for the advancement of learning
a literary or scientific periodical
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References
[edit]- "Athenaeum, n.", in the Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press.