homo sovieticus
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Translingual
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]First appears c. 1918 in the publication Collected Reprints by Asa Crawford Chandler, but popularized by the philosopher Alexander Zinoviev in the early 1980s; from Contemporary Latin homō sovieticus (“Soviet man”), a calque of colloquial Russian сове́тский челове́к (sovétskij čelovék) modelled on taxonomic names like Homo sapiens.
Pronunciation
[edit]- Latin: (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ˈhɔ.moː sɔ.wiˈɛ.t̪ɪ.kʊs]
Noun
[edit]homo sovieticus m (plural homines sovietici)
- (usually derogatory) A person molded by having lived in the Soviet Union or Eastern Bloc, variously characterized as passively conformist, apathetic, rootless, etc.
- Near-synonym: sovok
- 1918, Asa Crawford Chandler, Collected Reprints (in English), page 231:
- The "homo sovieticus", as some writers call the members of the numerous states of the U.S.S.R., has, it seems, great admiration for sciences, though the expression of other intellectual activities is considearbly reduced.
- 2000, Ania Savage, “Birth of an Independent Nation”, in Return to Ukraine (Eastern European Studies; 12) (in English), College Station, Tex.: Texas A&M University Press, →ISBN, page 177:
- Ukrainian became the language of the poor, the ignorant, and the backward. In the meantime, Soviet Ukrainian leaders, mimicking [Mikhail] Gorbachev, were saying that their babusias (the diminutive form of babushkas, or grandmothers) spoke a quaint tongue, but that Homo sovieticus was a man above quaintness and folklore.
- 2017 September 5, Michael Gentile, Dmytro Potekhin, “Beyond Homo Sovieticus: Soviet identity as a weapon of mass deconstruction”, in New Eastern Europe[1] (in English):
- Homines Sovietici represent, to put it differently, the human left-overs of socialism. An alternative non-ideological interpretation of homines sovietici is that they are individuals who responded in different ways to the rules and norms of the system which they were forced to navigate, just like in any other society. […]
Translations
[edit]Typical Soviet national
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See also
[edit]Polish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Learned borrowing from Contemporary Latin homo sovieticus.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]homo sovieticus m pers
- homo sovieticus (person molded by having lived in the Soviet Union or Eastern Bloc, variously characterized as passively conformist, apathetic, rootless, etc.)
Declension
[edit]Declension of homo sovieticus
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | homo sovieticus | homo sovieticusi/sovieticusy (deprecative) |
genitive | homo sovieticusa | homo sovieticusów |
dative | homo sovieticusowi | homo sovieticusom |
accusative | homo sovieticusa | homo sovieticusów |
instrumental | homo sovieticusem | homo sovieticusami |
locative | homo sovieticusie | homo sovieticusach |
vocative | homo sovieticusie | homo sovieticusi |
Further reading
[edit]- homo sovieticus in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
- homo sovieticus in Polish dictionaries at PWN
- homo sovieticus in PWN's encyclopedia
Categories:
- Translingual terms borrowed from Contemporary Latin
- Translingual terms derived from Contemporary Latin
- Translingual terms calqued from Russian
- Translingual terms derived from Russian
- Latin terms with IPA pronunciation
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual nouns
- Translingual masculine nouns
- Translingual derogatory terms
- Translingual terms with quotations
- Polish terms derived from Russian
- Polish terms borrowed from Contemporary Latin
- Polish learned borrowings from Contemporary Latin
- Polish terms derived from Contemporary Latin
- Polish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Polish lemmas
- Polish nouns
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- Polish masculine nouns
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- pl:Communism
- pl:People
- pl:Soviet Union