vicambulist
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin vīcus (“street”) + -ambulist (“walker”). Later popularized by its inclusion in the Oxford English Dictionary and thence various "rare word" lists.
Noun
[edit]vicambulist (plural vicambulists)
- (rare) Someone who walks or wanders streets.
- 2011, T. Byram Karasu, Gotham Chronicles: The Culture of Sociopathy, Lanham, M.D. […]: Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 134:
- For example, he would stare at the windows of shops; then, when the sales staff would encourage him to enter, he would discount them with indignation that he was not a browser—he was a vicambulist and also an excavator—literary, that is, and he would wink.
- 2017, Peter van Buren, Hooper's War, Sedona, A.Z.: Luminis Books, →ISBN, page 28:
- I am Professor Shinichiro Kanazawa, Department of Western Philosophy, Kyoto University. My card. I am here as a vicambulist, someone who pleasantly strolls around cities for recreation, though like you I prefer the vernacular 'to ramble.'
Related terms
[edit]References
[edit]- “vicambulate, v.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.