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Sycophancy   Listen
noun
Sycophancy  n.  The character or characteristic of a sycophant. Hence: -
(a)
False accusation; calumniation; talebearing. (Obs.)
(b)
Obsequious flattery; servility. "The sycophancy of A.Philips had prejudiced Mr. Addison against Pope."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sycophancy" Quotes from Famous Books



... of a pro-slavery policy on the great majority of Southern white population. This would bring the offender within the Southern definition of an 'incendiary,' and the offense would be heinous. The pro-slavery spirit has always demanded sycophancy where its strength was great enough to enforce it, and has ever been ready to invoke the law of force where its theories were contradicted. Even the fundamental law of the South, contained in Southern State Constitutions in favor of ...
— Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. • Various

... gone down in history as containing the most spectacular denouement in the record of legal procedure in the New World. Had it been concerned, as was anticipated, only with routine legal procedure against the man Ketchim, a weak-souled compound of feeble sycophancy and low morals, it would have attracted slight attention, and would have been spread upon the court records by uninterested clerks with never a second thought. But there were elements entering into it of whose existence the outside world could not have even dreamed. Into it converged threads ...
— Carmen Ariza • Charles Francis Stocking

... Iago is a part in which the actor acts an actor—and precisely in proportion as he shows he is acting, is he successful in the character. The usual error is in showing too little of the actor in his interviews with Cassio and Othello; his friendliness, sycophancy, and good humour become too real, as if it were the performer's cue to enact those qualities, whereas he is only to assume them for the nonce—the real presentment of the man being a malicious, revengeful, and astute villain. I think, also, my dear fellow, that our friend Iago is ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 59, No. 367, May 1846 • Various



Words linked to "Sycophancy" :   servility, sycophant, obsequiousness, subservience



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