English edit

Etymology edit

Sauron +‎ -esque

Adjective edit

Sauronesque (comparative more Sauronesque, superlative most Sauronesque)

  1. Having similar traits to the fictional character Sauron from the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, including evilness, tyrannicalness, or all-seeingness.
    • 1984, Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact, Volume 104, Issues 10-14, page 146:
      This crew faces the Sauronesque embodiment of evil, the Shadow, its minions, the savage Reavers, and treachery in the usurper of Arlen's throne.
    • 2003 January 2, Noah Shachtman, “Bush's Year of U.S. Surveillance”, in Wired:
      And it's not the only Sauronesque Bush program
    • 2008, Chronicles, volume 32, page 36:
      Their Sauronesque motto—Join us, and we can rule the Middle East together—doesn't have quite the catchy ring it once did.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Sauronesque.