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ukase

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See also: Ukase

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ука́з (ukáz, edict, decree).

Pronunciation

Noun

ukase (plural ukases)

  1. An authoritative proclamation; an edict, especially decreed by a Russian czar or later ruler.
    • c. 1844, Henry Brougham, Political Philosophy:
      Many estates peopled with crown peasants have been, according to an ukase of Peter the Great, ceded to particular individuals on condition of establishing manufactories []
    • 1805 May 6, The Times, page 3, column C:
      An Ukase, it appears, has been issued by the Emperor Alexander, to facilitate the introduction of calimancoes and other Norwich goods into his Empire.
    • 1984 August 5, William Safire, “Goodbye Sex, Hello Gender”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      Two years ago, the word went forth to friend and foe alike that gender applied to grammar while sex applied to people. I issued the ukase: “If you have a friend of the female sex, you are a red-blooded American boy; if you have a friend of the feminine gender, you have an unnatural attachment to a word.”
    • 1988, James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, Oxford, published 2004, page 704:
      The planters, he explained in a letter to Lincoln, would accept emancipation by ukase in preference to being compelled to enact it themselves in a new constitution.
  2. (figuratively) Any absolutist order or arrogant proclamation
    Synonym: diktat
    • 1965, John Fowles, The Magus:
      I knew a stunned plunge of disappointment and a bitter anger. What right had he to issue such an arbitrary ukase?
    • 2008 July, Stephen Burt, “Kick Over the Scenery”, in London Review of Books:
      It is a short step from discovering that the world we know is a fake or a cheat to discovering that human beings are themselves factitious: that we are robots, ‘simulacra’ (the title of one of Dick’s novels), ‘just reflex machines’, ‘repeating doomed patterns, a single pattern, over and over’ in accordance with biological or economic ukases.

Translations

See also

Further reading

Anagrams

French

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ука́з (ukáz, edict, decree).

Pronunciation

Noun

ukase m (plural ukases)

  1. (historical) ukase (a decree from a Russian ruler, or any absolute or arrogant order)
  2. edict, dictate

Descendants

  • Dutch: oekaze

See also

Further reading

Italian

Alternative forms

Noun

ukase m (invariable)

  1. ukase

Portuguese

Alternative forms

Noun

ukase m (plural ukases)

  1. ukase (proclamation by a Russian ruler)