oppidan
English
Adjective
oppidan (not comparable)
- (rare) Of or pertaining to a town or conurbation.
- 1843, George Calvert Holland, The Vital Statistics of Sheffield, page 106:
- ... calculating the portions of the population, which are purely oppidan, suburban and rural, separately, ...
- 1984, Gerald Cornelius Monsman, Confessions of a Prosaic Dreamer: Charles Lamb's art of autobiography, →ISBN, page 78:
- The beggar whom Elia encounters... is an oppidan caricature of the old man in “Witches” who was conjured up in the demonic vision, a dark, irrational double that overwhelms and destroys innocence.
Noun
oppidan (plural oppidans)
- (rare, obsolete) A town dweller.
- 1856, John Wade, England's Greatness, page 496:
- But money is all-potent, and wealthy oppidans soon found means to elbow the aristocracy in their choicest assemblies.
- (also Oppidan) A class of student in traditional English public schools such as Eton; opposed to colleger or King's Scholar.
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