Anglo-Saxonry

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Anglo-Saxon +‎ -ry.

Noun[edit]

Anglo-Saxonry (countable and uncountable, plural Anglo-Saxonries)

  1. (uncountable) The Anglo-Saxon descendant populations of the world collectively.
    Synonym: Anglo-Saxondom
    • 1902, The Book Buyer, page 582:
      Juell Demming is a somewhat bewildering argument in favor of an Anglo-Saxon union, or, as its author prefers to call it, of Anglo-Saxonry.
    • 1957, Claude Bissell, Our Living Tradition:
      Englishness, Anglo-Saxonry, becomes, as I have already hinted, his ruling prejudice, an unconscious substitute for, a psychological equivalent of, religious faith.
    • 2007, Anthony Brundage, Richard A. Cosgrove, The Great Tradition:
      Such a quarrel would undermine the community of Anglo-Saxonry that he supported so strenuously.
  2. (countable) An Anglo-Saxonism.
    • 1986, John Lucas, Modern English Poetry:
      Not for him the Anglo-Saxonries of William Barnes or of the 1890s.