otherdom

English

Etymology

From other + -dom.

Noun

otherdom (plural otherdoms)

  1. (rare) The state, condition, or existence of others; the tendency toward preferring, serving, or doing for others; selflessness.
    • 1908, Melvin Linwood Severy, Gillette's Industrial Solution: World Corporation:
      It is clearly shown that right and wrong are conditions of otherdom. That ethics, in short, is a meaningless term to a single, isolated individual.
    • 1909, Bernard Shaw, Dramatic opinions and essays, with an apology:
      Altogether, I seriously recommend those of my readers who find a pantomime once a year good for them, to go next year to the Britannia, and leave the West End to its boredoms and all the otherdoms that make it so expensively dreary.
    • 1997, David S. Blanchard, (Please provide the book title or journal name):
      I can think of three good reasons why the hospital should move us out to the margins of "otherdom." For one, there are twenty-one letters in our merged Unitarian Universalist name. "Other" is short, with only five. Then there is the fact that in ...

Antonyms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.