From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:
Cosmopolitan \Cos`mo*pol"i*tan\, Cosmopolite \Cos*mop"o*lite\,
a.
1. Having no fixed residence; at home in any place; free from
local attachments or prejudices; not provincial; liberal.
[1913 Webster]
In other countries taste is perphaps too exclusively
national, in Germany it is certainly too
cosmopolite. --Sir W.
Hamilton.
[1913 Webster]
2. Common everywhere; widely spread; found in all parts of
the world.
[1913 Webster]
The Cheiroptera are cosmopolitan. --R. Owen.
[1913 Webster]
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:
Cosmopolitan \Cos`mo*pol"i*tan\ (-p?l"?-tan), Cosmopolite
\Cos*mop"o*lite\ (k?z-m?p"?-l?t), n. [Gr. kosmopoli`ths; ko`smos
the world + poli`ths citizen, po`lis city: cf. F.
cosmopolitain, cosmopolite.]
One who has no fixed residence, or who is at home in every
place; a citizen of the world.
[1913 Webster] Cosmopolitan
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
cosmopolitan
adj 1: growing or occurring in many parts of the world; "a
cosmopolitan herb"; "cosmopolitan in distribution" [syn:
{cosmopolitan}, {widely distributed}] [ant: {endemic}]
2: composed of people from or at home in many parts of the
world; especially not provincial in attitudes or interests;
"his cosmopolitan benevolence impartially extended to all
races and to all creeds"- T.B. Macaulay; "the ancient and
cosmopolitan societies of Syria and Egypt"; "that queer,
cosmopolitan, rather sinister crowd found around the
Marseilles docks" [ant: {provincial}]
3: of worldwide scope or applicability; "an issue of
cosmopolitan import"; "the shrewdest political and ecumenical
comment of our time"- Christopher Morley; "universal
experience" [syn: {cosmopolitan}, {ecumenical},
{oecumenical}, {general}, {universal}, {worldwide}, {world-
wide}]
n 1: a sophisticated person who has travelled in many countries
[syn: {cosmopolitan}, {cosmopolite}]
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