antipous

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἀντίπους (antípous).[1]

Noun

antipous (plural antipodes)

  1. (rare) singular of antipodes; synonym of antipode
    • 1826 April, James Johnson, editor, The Medico-Chirurgical Review, London: [] G. Hayden, [] Burgess & Hill, [], page 443:
      Far and wide is the difference between hydrencephalus and peripneumony. Peripneumony is a disease not to be mistaken, evident to the feelings, palpable to the senses, destitute of all uncertainty:—Hydrencephalus is the antipous to these, is surrounded with mystery, and its very existence never undeniably determined but by dissection.
    • 1830 March, James Johnson, editor, The Medico-Chirurgical Review, and Journal of Practical Medicine, London: [] S. Highley, [], page 412:
      Another cause of non-union is one the very antipous of too much motion, viz. too little.
    • 1836, J. Filmer Emmett, “Tekel;” or, A Warning to the Spiritual Israel of the Present Day, Setting Forth Their False and Unscriptural Position; Also, the Only Path by Which They Can Return unto the Lord Their God, London: [] [F]or the Author by Ebenezer Palmer and Son, [], page 115:
      Brethren, we must not view one side of man (though I digress) without seeing the other; let us see him not by himself, he may be a rustic-boor, chop-stick, serf, drudge, dirty, ragged, illiterate, vulgar; but, he may be at the same time one of Jesus’ chosen, a stone of the temple, a lord of eternity, one who will judge angels; his antipous here, (the delicate walker above) will also be his antipous hereafter, he will be his servant. (Mat. xxiii. 11. xix. 30.)
    • 1844, Daniel Drake, Lunsford P[itts] Yandell, Thomas W. Colescott, editors, The Western Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Louisville, Ky.: [] Prentice & Weissinger, [], page 176:
      Priessnitz has got a rival close to his own castle! About four miles from Graffenberg, in the lovely valley of Lindiviesse, Dr. Schrott, an old school-fellow of the apostle of hydropathy, has started a cure-all, in opposition to the Silesian peasant. His methodus medendi is no vile imitation of that of the far-famed practitioner of Graeffenberg. It is a veritable antipous.
    • a. 1846, Richard Harris Barham, “The Relic; or The Antiquary and the Patriot. A Canterbury Tale, Founded on Fact.”, in [Richard Harris Dalton Barham], editor, The Life and Letters of the Rev. Richard Harris Barham, Author of The Ingoldsby Legends: with a Selection from His Miscellaneous Poems, volume II, London: Richard Bentley, [], published 1870, page 235:
      He was forsooth a great Arithmetician, / Had all the Ready Reckoner at command, / And, having been a sort of Sub-Physician, / Now came to cast the water of the Land, / Which he pronounced in a most vile condition, / So bad in fact ’twas clear things could not stand; / The antipous of Leibnitz, still his song / Ran ever thus, ‘Whatever is is wrong.’
    • 1899, Adolphus William Ward, A History of English Dramatic Literature to the Death of Queen Anne, London: Macmillan and Co., Limited, page 463:
      Its immediate motive cause was the sentiment of ‘now or never’ aroused by Whitgift’s policy of repression after his acceptance of the Primacy in 1583; its intellectual parentage may be ascribed to Cartwright, the antipous of Whitgift in the religious history of the reign.
    • 2006, Apeiron, volume 39, page 355:
      ‘It is absurd to deny that in the universe there is one part up and another down, as some claim; they say that there is no one part up and another down because the universe is uniform in every direction, and every person walking <round the earth> will at every point be his own antipous.’

References

  1. antipous, n.”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, March 2023.
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