Laconophile
See also: laconophile
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪ̯l
Adjective
Laconophile (not comparable)
- exhibiting Laconophilia, love for or obsession with the Spartans
- 2007, Josiah Ober, Athenian legacies: Essays on the Politics of Going on Together[1], Princeton University Press, →ISBN, page 152:
- I would certainly not want to claim that Thucydides meant the readers of Pericles’ Funeral Oration to recall some particular Laconophile tract, nor, a fortiori, that Demosthenes had a copy of Plato’s dialogues in hand when he composed his speech against Meidias.
Noun
Laconophile (plural Laconophiles)
- one who loves or is obsessed with the Spartans
- 1982, Peter Krentz, The Thirty at Athens[2], Cornell University Press, →ISBN, page 46:
- There is no evidence that he fought with Sparta against Athens, but as he was a notorious Laconophile, he was a suitable choice to lead the oligarchs