aristocrat

Etymology
From, attested once in the 16th century but recoined in the era, from , from , from , from  (compare 🇨🇬) +. .

Noun

 * 1) One of the aristocracy, nobility, or people of rank in a community; one of a ruling class; a noble (originally in Revolutionary France).
 * 2) A proponent of aristocracy; an advocate of aristocratic government.
 * 3) * 1974: Plato (author) and Desmond Lee (translator), The Republic (2nd edition, revised; Penguin Classics; ISBN 0140440488, Translator’s Introduction, pages 51 and 53:
 * Professor Fite, in The Platonic Legend, deprecates earlier idealization, and finds Plato to be an aristocrat, something of a snob, and the advocate of a restrictively organized society.
 * Plato was, as has so often been observed, temperamentally an aristocrat. And he believed that the qualities needed in his rulers were, in general, hereditary, and that given knowledge and opportunity you could deliberately breed for them.
 * 1)  A cipher in which the original punctuation and spacing are retained.
 * 1)  A cipher in which the original punctuation and spacing are retained.

Hyponyms

 * See also Thesaurus:nobleman

Translations

 * Albanian:,
 * Arabic: أَرِسْتُقْرَاطِيّ, أَرِسْتُقْرَاطِيَّة
 * Belarusian: арыстакра́т, арыстакра́тка
 * Bulgarian:, аристокра́тка
 * Catalan:
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:
 * Czech: ,
 * Danish: aristokrat
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: aristokrato
 * Finnish: ,
 * French:
 * Galician: aristócrata
 * Georgian: არისტოკრატი,, თავადი, წარჩინებული
 * German: ,
 * Greek:
 * Hindi:
 * Hungarian:
 * Ido:
 * Italian: ,
 * Japanese:, アリストクラット
 * Korean:
 * Latin:
 * Macedonian: аристокра́т, аристокра́тка, велможа
 * Malay:, aristokrat
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål:
 * Nynorsk: aristokrat
 * Polish:, , ,
 * Portuguese:
 * Russian: ,
 * Serbo-Croatian: ,
 * Slovak:, šľachtičná
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Tibetan: སྐུ་དྲག, སྒེར་པ
 * Ukrainian: ,
 * Urdu: اشراف
 * Welsh: gŵr bruh

Etymology
.