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tyranny
[tir-uh-nee]
noun
plural
tyranniesarbitrary or unrestrained exercise of power; despotic abuse of authority.
the government or rule of a tyrant or absolute ruler.
a state ruled by a tyrant or absolute ruler.
oppressive or unjustly severe government on the part of any ruler.
undue severity or harshness.
a cruel or harsh act or proceeding; an arbitrary, oppressive, or tyrannical action.
tyranny
/ ˈtɪrənɪ /
noun
government by a tyrant or tyrants; despotism
similarly oppressive and unjust government by more than one person
arbitrary, unreasonable, or despotic behaviour or use of authority
the teacher's tyranny
any harsh discipline or oppression
the tyranny of the clock
a political unit ruled by a tyrant
(esp in ancient Greece) government by a usurper
a tyrannical act
Other Word Forms
- tyrannous adjective
- tyrannously adverb
- tyrannousness noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of tyranny1
Example Sentences
Senate Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer said "this is what tyranny looks like."
A portable TV is programmed to play only episodes of “The Simpsons” and offers a clever critique of the streaming era’s tyranny of choice.
“I believe the best way in which we can demonstrate resistance is not bending the knee to tyranny.”
They live off the unreliability of the peso or, to borrow from Milton Friedman, the “tyranny of the status quo.”
My hope is that this war ends with the release of hostages, the end of Hamas’s tyranny, and the rebirth of Gaza as a place open to peace and prosperity.
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Related Words
- authoritarianism www.thesaurus.com
- autocracy
- coercion
- cruelty
- despotism
- domination
- oligarchy
- oppression
- terrorism
- totalitarianism
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