philosophunculist

English edit

Etymology edit

From philosophuncule +‎ -ist.

Pronunciation edit

  • (UK) IPA(key): /fɪˌlɒsəˈfʌŋkjʊlɪst/

Noun edit

philosophunculist (plural philosophunculists)

  1. (rare) A minor or insignificant philosopher; someone who claims philosophical expertise that they do not possess. [from 19th c.]
    • 1840 May, Fraser's Magazine, volume 21, page 588:
      The unsettled races of the north, constituting the Chartists, are Scotch philosophunculists and Irish savages, or the children of such.
    • 1991, Edward W Tayler, Donne's Idea of a Woman, p. 156 n. 7:
      Cunningham's brilliant explication of ‘glassie Essence’ and related matters first appeared in ELH, 19 (1952), see esp. p. 266, but has been ignored by those whom Robert Burton would call the philosophunculists of the academy as well as by most students of Shakespeare.
    • 2010, Bob Behrent, Planes, Pranks and Pepto-Bismol:
      However, you should never be a philosophunculist (Go look it up) to succeed in your business ventures.