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Word Meanings - LEVELER - Book Publishers vocabulary database

1. One who, or that which, levels. 2. One who would remove social inequalities or distinctions; a socialist.

Related words: (words related to LEVELER)

  • SOCIALIST; SOCIALISTIC
    Pertaining to, or of the nature of, socialism.
  • SOCIALIZE
    1. To render social. 2. To subject to, or regulate by, socialism.
  • SOCIALITY
    The quality of being social; socialness.
  • WHICHEVER; WHICHSOEVER
    Whether one or another; whether one or the other; which; that one which; as, whichever road you take, it will lead you to town.
  • SOCIAL
    Naturally growing in groups or masses; -- said of many individual plants of the same species. Living in communities consisting of males, females, and neuters, as do ants and most bees. Forming compound groups or colonies by budding from
  • WHICH
    the root of hwa who + lic body; hence properly, of what sort or kind; akin to OS. hwilik which, OFries. hwelik, D. welk, G. welch, OHG. welih, hwelih, Icel. hvilikr, Dan. & Sw. hvilken, Goth. hwileiks, 1. Of what sort or kind; what; what a; who.
  • WOULDINGNESS
    Willingness; desire.
  • SOCIALLY
    In a social manner; sociably.
  • REMOVER
    One who removes; as, a remover of landmarks. Bacon.
  • WOULD-BE
    ' (as, a would-be poet.
  • REMOVED
    1. Changed in place. 2. Dismissed from office. 3. Distant in location; remote. "Something finer than you could purchase in so removed a dwelling." Shak. 4. Distant by degrees in relationship; as, a cousin once removed. -- Re*mov"ed*ness (r, n.
  • SOCIALNESS
    The quality or state of being social.
  • REMOVE
    1. To move away from the position occupied; to cause to change place; to displace; as, to remove a building. Thou shalt not remove thy neighbor's landmark. Deut. xix. 14. When we had dined, to prevent the ladies' leaving us, I generally ordered
  • SOCIALISM
    A theory or system of social reform which contemplates a complete reconstruction of society, with a more just and equitable distribution of property and labor. In popular usage, the term is often employed to indicate any lawless, revolutionary
  • WOULD
    Commonly used as an auxiliary verb, either in the past tense or in the conditional or optative present. See 2d & 3d Will. Note: Would was formerly used also as the past participle of Will. Right as our Lord hath would. Chaucer.
  • WOULDING
    Emotion of desire; inclination; velleity. Hammond.
  • SOCIALIST
    One who advocates or practices the doctrines of socialism.
  • STATE SOCIALISM
    A form of socialism, esp. advocated in Germany, which, while retaining the right of private property and the institution of the family and other features of the present form of the state, would intervene by various measures intended to
  • DISSOCIAL
    Unfriendly to society; contracted; selfish; as, dissocial feelings.
  • CHRISTIAN SOCIALISM
    Any theory or system that aims to combine the teachings of Christ with the teachings of socialism in their applications to life; Christianized socialism; esp., the principles of this nature advocated by F. D. Maurice, Charles Kingsley, and others
  • INTERSOCIAL
    Pertaining to the mutual intercourse or relations of persons in society; social.
  • DISSOCIALIZE
    To render unsocial.

 

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