anthropophagistic

English edit

Adjective edit

anthropophagistic (comparative more anthropophagistic, superlative most anthropophagistic)

  1. (rare) cannibalistic
    • 1826, John Anderson, “Mission to the East Coast of Sumatra in 1823”, in The Quarterly Review[1], volume 34, page 109:
      This happened in New Zealand; but as they were all killed—and eaten, except him who was converted into an anthropophagistic necklace—we must ask who brought the story to London?
    • 1870 April, “The Three Volunteers”, in The Gentleman's Journal[2], volume 1, page 342:
      Now it must not be supposed that Mrs. Jones was a lady of ghost-like or anthropophagistic habit, for it was only a story by the above title, and it was being mentally digested, when Mr. Jones spoke without lifting his eyes from the paper []
    • 1990, Neil Larsen, Modernism and Hegemony: A Materialist Critique of Aesthetic Agencies[3]:
      In true anthropophagistic fashion, an apparently domesticated cultural subject trumps its more powerful opponent by feigning a retreat.

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