infracaninophile
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pseudo-Latin plus a suffix, from infra- + canine + -phile. An early twentieth-century coinage by American writer Christopher Morley.
Noun
[edit]infracaninophile (plural infracaninophiles)
- A person who loves or admires underdogs.
- 1940, Michael J. Bradley, National Labor Relations Act: hearings before the Special Committee to Investigate National Labor Relations Board, volume 29, page 7775:
- But I do quarrel with those who under the guise of friendship for labor assume the role of infracaninophiles and then proceed to sabotage everything that means anything to labor.
- 1976, Samuel Krislov, Representative Bureaucracy, Prentice-Hall, page 46:
- 'A lover of the upper-dog', as distinguished from today's infracaninophiles.
- 2007, Ulric Neisser, "Ulric Neisser", in Gardner Lindzey and William McKinley Runyan, eds., A History of Psychology in Autobiography, American Psychological Association, Volume 9, page 276:
- I was already a committed infracaninophile, and Gestalt psychology was clearly the underdog in a department that included B. F. Skinner.
References
[edit]- Elster, Charles Harrington. There's a Word for It!: A Grandiloquent Guide to Life, Gallery Books, 1997.