sciolist

NOUN
  1. an amateur who engages in an activity without serious intentions and who pretends to have knowledge
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How To Use sciolist In A Sentence

  • If he were noticed, it was only to be traduced as a sciolist, (imperitus dialecticæ et aliarum bonarum artium, says Dr. Reynolds,) and to be exposed for imagined lapses in scholarship in an age when for a writer not to be a scholar, was like Discovery of Witches The Wonderfull Discoverie of Witches in the Countie of Lancaster
  • It is a well-attested fact, especially since the sacred precincts of established truth have been raided by every puerile pedant and sciolist who can handle a pen, that any absurdity whatever, so long as it is clad "in the lion's skin" and no matter how loudly it brays, has some fatal claim upon the rambling credulity of the multitude. The Doctor's Daughter
  • The smooth sciolist Stellato rallied his weak wits and uttered a cry of wonder at such flagitious heresy. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 13, No. 80, June, 1864
  • Notwithstanding, for my money you write both extremely well and at an appropriately level for your subject matter, at a good level for the sciolist (me, your reader, not you). Pat Yourselves on the Back
  • The hero of the epic is at once sciolist and simpleton, ‘knowing many things, but knowing them all badly’. Hesiod, Homeric Hymns, and Homerica
  • The third is the hygienic sciolist, who drinks on principle poor “Gladstone” and thin French wines, cheap and nasty; and the survivor is the man who enjoys a quantum suff. of humming Scotch and Burton ales, sherry, Madeira, and port, with a modicum of cognac. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
  • It is claimed that a Monotheistic Pantheism, that is, the idea of _one essence_, not person, but _essence_, is to _unite_, or make one, the whole human family upon the scientific (sciolistic) base that man himself is one grand part of the grand all-pervading, impersonal essence. The Christian Foundation, Or, Scientific and Religious Journal, June, 1880
  • The hero of the epic is at once sciolist and simpleton, 'knowing many things, but knowing them all badly'. Hesiod, the Homeric Hymns, and Homerica
  • Here above all was silence from all our great orator took delight in, from formidable men, from moral indignation, from the 'sciolist' who 'is never sad,' from all in modern life that would destroy the arts; and here, to take a thought from another playwright of our school, he could love Time as only women and great artists do and need never sell it. Synge and the Ireland of His Time
  • We do not read of the Son of God that He sowed or ploughed, wove or digged; nor did any other of the mechanic arts befit the divine wisdom incarnate except to trace letters in writing, that every gentleman and sciolist may know that fingers are given by God to men for the task of writing rather than for war. The Love of Books : The Philobiblon of Richard de Bury
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