From ethno- + -logist.
ethnologist (plural ethnologists)
- One who practices ethnology.
1920, Edward Carpenter, Pagan and Christian Creeds, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., published 1921, page 194:The learned modern Ethnologists, however, will generally have none of this latter idea. As a rule they delight in representing early peoples as totally destitute of common sense (which is supposed to be a monopoly of us moderns!); and if the Sabbath-arrangement has had any value or use they insist on ascribing this to pure accident, and not to the application of any sane argument or reason.
one who practices ethnology
- Armenian: ազգաբան (hy) (azgaban)
- Asturian: etnólogu m, etnóloga f
- Belarusian: этно́лаг m (etnólah)
- Catalan: etnòleg m, etnòloga f
- Czech: etnolog (cs) m
- Danish: etnolog (da) c
- Dutch: ethnoloog m, ethnologe f
- Esperanto: etnologo
- French: ethnologue (fr) m or f
- Galician: etnólogo m, etnóloga f
- German: Ethnologe (de) m, Ethnologin (de) f, Völkerkundler (de) m
- Hungarian: etnológus (hu)
- Ido: etnologo (io)
- Irish: eitneolaí m
- Latvian: etnologs m, etnoloģe f
- Polish: etnolog m, etnolożka f
- Portuguese: etnólogo m, etnóloga f, etnologista m or f
- Romanian: etnolog (ro) m, etnologă (ro) f
- Russian: этнолог (ru) m (etnolog)
- Spanish: etnólogo m, etnóloga f
- Swedish: etnolog (sv) c
- Ukrainian: етно́лог m (etnóloh), народозна́вець m (narodoznávecʹ)
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