analphabete

See also: analphabète

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French analphabète.

Noun

analphabete (plural analphabetes)

  1. (rare) Alternative spelling of analphabet
    • 1896, J[ohn] M[orrison] Reid; J. T. Gracey, “Part XI. Mission to Italy.”, in Missions and the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church [] In Three Volumes, volume III, New York, N.Y.: Hunt & Eaton; Cincinnati, Oh.: Cranston & Curts, section 7 (Annual Conferences, 1886–1887), page 327:
      In 1861, out of a total population of 21,777,331, there were no less than 16,999,701 "analphabetes," or persons absolutely unable to read.
    • 1968, Robert [Ligon] Harrison, Samuel Beckett’s Murphy: A Critical Excursion (University of Georgia Monographs; no. 15), Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, OCLC 449329, page 57:
      The Beckettian progression appears occasionally: while Miss Counihan (static) is an omnivorous reader and Murphy (transitional) a strict non-reader, Cooper is an analphabete.
    • 1986, Michael Hofmann, “From A to B and Back Again”, in Frank Ormsby and Robert Johnstone, editors, The Honest Ulsterman, number 82, Belfast: Michael Stephens, ISSN 0018-4543, OCLC 877549159, page 16; reprinted in Mark Ford, editor, London: A History in Verse, Cambridge, Mass.; London: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2012, →ISBN, page 704:
      The porter was an analphabete, but together / we found your name, down among the Os, / and there you were, my brave love, / in a loose hospital gown that covered nothing; []

Adjective

analphabete (comparative more analphabete, superlative most analphabete)

  1. (rare) Alternative spelling of analphabet
    • 1965, Commonweal, volume 82, ISSN 0010-3330, OCLC 436693036, page 325, column 1:
      All these love tales are in verse, transmitted up to this day, through countless generations of oral tradition by an analphabete people with an inborn, unerring sense of art.
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