DESPOT


Meaning of DESPOT in English

ˈdespə]t, -ˌspä], usu ]d.+V\ noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle French, despot, despote, from Greek despotēs master, lord, despot; akin to Sanskrit dampati lord of the house; both from a prehistoric compound whose first and second constituents are akin respectively to Latin domus house and to Latin potis able — more at timber , potent

1.

a. : a Byzantine emperor or a prince of his imperial house : a vassal prince — used as a title of honor or address

b. : a bishop or patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church

c. : a petty Christian ruler tributary to the Turks after the Turkish conquest of Constantinople

the despot of Morea

d. : an Italian hereditary prince or military leader during the Renaissance

2.

a. : a ruler with absolute or virtually absolute power and authority : autocrat

Lord Curzon, the most enigmatic and greatest of those benevolent despots — W.B.Willcox

b. : a ruler exercising absolute power abusively, oppressively, or tyrannously : tyrant

as a despot he ruled by the force of arms

3.

a. : a person having recognized and complete governance or authority and usually domineering or oppressive

affection by itself can turn an old nurse into a cranky despot — Joyce Cary

b. : an animal or thing that seems to hold dominance and strict control

it is not necessarily the strongest bird which becomes despot — E.A.Armstrong

the tireless machine is the despot of our age — Waldemar Kaempffert

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.