Georgian
nameEtymology
From George + -ian, possibly with influence from its Latin equivalent (as other regnal adjectives and nouns so derived), Geōrgius.
- derived from equivalent
Definitions
The language of Georgia, a country in Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
A person or a descendant of a person from Georgia, a country in Eastern Europe and…
A person or a descendant of a person from Georgia, a country in Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
A native or resident of the state of Georgia in the United States of America.
- Trump attorney Lin Wood, a favorite of the QAnon crowd, is advising Georgians not to vote for Perdue and Loeffler.
›+ 8 more definitionsshow fewer
Of, from, or pertaining to the Eastern European country of Georgia, the Georgian people…
Of, from, or pertaining to the Eastern European country of Georgia, the Georgian people or the Georgian language.
- As in their narrow defeat of Argentina last week, England were indisciplined at the breakdown, and if Georgian fly-half Merab Kvirikashvili had remembered his kicking boots, Johnson's side might have been behind at half-time.
Of, from, or pertaining to the U.S. state of Georgia or its Georgian English dialect.
A British citizen during the reign of a king named George.
Of, from, or characteristic of the reigns of Kings George I and George II of Great…
Of, from, or characteristic of the reigns of Kings George I and George II of Great Britain, and George III and George IV of the United Kingdom (1714–1830), sometimes also including the brief reign of William IV (1830–1837).
Pertaining to a movement in lyric poetry during the reign of King George V of the United…
Pertaining to a movement in lyric poetry during the reign of King George V of the United Kingdom (1910–1936).
- Georgian Poetry
Of or relating to an architectural style of the period, marked by symmetry and proportion…
Of or relating to an architectural style of the period, marked by symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome.
Pertaining to or characteristic of German poet Stefan George (1868–1933).
- The same Georgian persona, leonine and sacerdotal (that of the aristocratic priest) appears throughout the reminiscences of all his disciples.
- Another example of this sterile Georgian orthodoxy is to be found in the case of Ernst Morwitz […]
- Kantorowicz […] warns against confusing a Georgian aesthetic “secret Germany,” which still slumbered in concealment, with contemporary, ‘awakened’ Nazi Germany.
Of or pertaining to Saint George.
The neighborhood
- neighborWiktionary’s coverage of Georgian terms
- neighborRegency
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for Georgian. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA