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Showing results for cosmopolitanism. Search instead for cosmopolitanise.
Synonyms

cosmopolitanism

American  
[koz-muh-pol-i-tn-iz-uhm] / ˌkɒz məˈpɒl ɪ tnˌɪz əm /

noun

  1. the fact or condition of belonging to all the world and not just one part, or of being at home all over the world.

    My cosmopolitanism is the result of a childhood being towed around the world by a restless father.

    Most studies of Victorian literature focus on the cosmopolitanism and global reach of realism.

  2. freedom from local or national ideas, values, and prejudices.

    Countries hosting this event will be able to join in a global celebration of cosmopolitanism and cultural diversity.

  3. Botany, Zoology. the fact or property of being widely distributed over the globe.

    By more minutely tracing the relations of the freshwater fauna to those of the marine fauna, perhaps the cosmopolitanism of freshwater animals can be explained.


Other Word Forms

  • noncosmopolitanism noun

Etymology

Origin of cosmopolitanism

cosmopolitan ( def. ) + -ism ( def. )

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

As the first foreign king to sit on its throne, John brought the provincial city its first taste of cosmopolitanism.

From The Wall Street Journal

Today, the phrase suggests Mitteleuropa, the borderless, multilingual cosmopolitanism of pre-1914 Europe; the world of yesterday, as the Austrian writer Stefan Zweig called it.

From The Wall Street Journal

A concerted campaign has cropped up seemingly overnight to turn Mamdani’s victory into an opportunity to attack cosmopolitanism.

From Salon

The exhibition is divided into 12 conceptual sections: ownership, presence, distinction, disguise, freedom, champion, respectability, jook, heritage, beauty, cool and cosmopolitanism.

From Salon

In the 1950s and ’60s, as the apartheid government enforced an increasingly brutal code of racial hierarchy, South African musicians, poets, artists, radical clergy and organizers found in this music a symbol of Black cosmopolitanism, interracial experimentation and free thought — all anathema to the regime.

From New York Times