speculant
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See also: spéculant
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]speculant (plural speculants)
- A speculator; one who makes speculative (high-risk) investments.
- 1935, Monthly Review, page 306:
- They moreover also belonged to those securities which speculants neglected at the beginning, which is perhaps sufficiently explained by the position of the rubber market and by the rubber price.
- 1994, The European Monetary System During the Phase of Transition to European Monetary Union: Future Scenarios and Various Reform Options, page 85:
- The thereby reduced inter currency interest rate in favour of the attacked currency decreases the financing costs of the speculants and, therefore, further increases the incentive to speculate.
- 2014, Peter Leoni, The Greeks and Hedging Explained:
- A third example would be a speculant that enters into the market purely on a direction view.
- A profiteer or illegal trader.
- 1915 September, “The Situation in Palestine”, in The Maccabæan: A Magazine of Jewish Life and Letters, volume 27, number 3, page 78:
- In this way the danger threatening the population from unscrupulous speculants was averted and the prices were kept down.
- 1994, Anders Johansson, Emancipation and Interdependence, page 163:
- There were many agents among the Russian speculants.
- 2019, Alina-Sandra Cucu, Planning Labour: Time and the Foundations of Industrial Socialism in Romania (International Studies in Social History; volume 32), Berghahn Books, →ISBN:
- For instance, on 6 July 1945, authorities stated that the saboteurs and the speculants ‘will be hit without mercy’.
- One who thinks about speculative subjects; one who dreams, extrapolates, or conjectures.
- 1882 January 11, T. Jones, “Economy in Cutting”, in The Weekly record of fashion, volume 7, number 316, page 9:
- To shew that the plan is not the vague dream of a speculant, Mr. Jones sent full-sized patterns pinned on a sheet of paper cut exactly to the length and width of material stated.
- 1890, Alfred Edersheim, Ella Edersheim, Tohu-Va-Vohu ['Without Form and Void'], page 118:
- This supposed possibility is straightway converted into an actuality, with no better support than that it has occurred as a possibility to the brain of a speculant.
- 1976, Prix Jeunesse, Fernsehen und Bildung, Television and Socialization Processes in the Family:
- The "gap in between" is thus often occupied by speculants and speculations which are neither in line with research results nor in line with practical considerations.
- 2018, Amir Levinson, Fireworks in a Dark Universe, World Scientific, page 287:
- On more abstract levels, scientists are trying to understand the connection between black holes and information theory and holography, and speculants are investigating whether wormholes can serve as a basis for the construction of time machines and whether the universe in which we live is one of many universes (estimated at 10500) in a multiverse.
Adjective
[edit]speculant (comparative more speculant, superlative most speculant)
- Speculative or hopefully wondering.
- 1843, Bernard M- (of S-), A Dream of a Queen's Reign., page 1:
- I essayed to arise out of my chair, that I might render a beseeming homage unto so excellent a presence but was prevented; amazement having fixed me agaze and half risen, as a statue of wonder; leaving to mine eyes only the power of a speculant admiration.
- 1907, John Halsham, Lonewood Corner: A Countryman's Horizons, page 13:
- In the new order of things—four years still leaves it new to a slow-moulded temperament—a feeling of detachment which is an old failing grows stronger, a sense of walking about among my kind, speculant, aloof.
- 1984, Emily Grosholz, The River Painter: Poems:
- Banks stocked with fishers are richer in dreams than signs of fish; the lines lead under uncircled surfaces sharp into fathoms of speculant green.
Dutch
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From speculeren + -ant.
Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file) - Hyphenation: spe‧cu‧lant
Noun
[edit]speculant m (plural speculanten, diminutive speculantje n)
Related terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- → Indonesian: spekulan
Romanian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from German Spekulant.
Noun
[edit]speculant m (plural speculanți)
Declension
[edit]Declension of speculant
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite articulation | definite articulation | indefinite articulation | definite articulation | |
nominative/accusative | (un) speculant | speculantul | (niște) speculanți | speculanții |
genitive/dative | (unui) speculant | speculantului | (unor) speculanți | speculanților |
vocative | speculantule | speculanților |
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English adjectives
- Dutch terms suffixed with -ant
- Dutch terms with audio pronunciation
- Dutch lemmas
- Dutch nouns
- Dutch nouns with plural in -en
- Dutch masculine nouns
- Romanian terms borrowed from German
- Romanian terms derived from German
- Romanian lemmas
- Romanian nouns
- Romanian countable nouns
- Romanian masculine nouns