belligerati
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Blend of belligerent + literati which is also the plural of belligerātus.
Noun
[edit]belligerati pl (plural only)
- Literary people, authors — literati — who promote wars of aggression.
- 2005, Tariq Ali, Street Fighting Years: An Autobiography Of The Sixties, page 19:
- I am not, in this instance, referring to the belligerati - Salman Rushdie, Martin Amis and chums - ever-present in the liberal press on both sides of the Atlantic.
- 2011, Andrew Charlton, Man-Made World, page 88:
- They are the belligerati who are given opinion columns and radio talkback programs; who are accorded the status of minor celebrities; and there can at times seem no end to the uniquely Australian cross of their public bullying
- 2011, Richard Seymour, American Insurgents: A Brief History of American Anti-Imperialism, page xviii:
- Since neoconservatives and the liberal belligerati have sought to appropriate these ideological resources on behalf of imperialism, aspects of this question will be examined in chapter 1.
Latin
[edit]Participle
[edit]belligerātī
- inflection of belligerātus: