infantocracy

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

infant +‎ -o- +‎ -cracy

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

infantocracy (countable and uncountable, plural infantocracies)

  1. Rule by children.
    • 1862, Dinah Maria Mulock, Domestic Stories by the Author of John Halifax, Gentleman, page 253:
      Well, it took a long time to dispose of our new fellow-travellers, for your infantocracy is the most absolute government under the sun.
    • 1968, Frederick C. Crews, The Patch Commission, page 25:
      The Spockian ploy is to announce one's sins and then go right ahead and compound them. All the man does is shed a few crocodile tears over the parents' unhappy lot and then proceed directly with his blueprint for infantocracy.
    • 1992, The Journal of Narrative Technique, volumes 22-23, page 87:
      In Kundera's unsentimental vision, moreover, children serve as emblems of the mindless "infantocracy" overtaking contemporary culture in both East and West.

Synonyms[edit]