people

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Yesterday he made a big point about more transparency, which for most people translates as 'clean government'.

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Definitions (34)

Toggle American Heritage definitions American Heritage Dictionary (11)

  1. noun Humans considered as a group or in indefinite numbers: People were dancing in the street. I met all sorts of people.
  2. noun A body of persons living in the same country under one national government; a nationality.
  3. noun A body of persons sharing a common religion, culture, language, or inherited condition of life.

Toggle Century definitions Century Dictionary (15)

Toggle GNU Webster definitions GNU Webster's 1913 (2)

Toggle WordNet definitions WordNet (6)

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Examples (50)

 

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fula · bakongo · vai · temne · susu · mende · kono · limba · yamasee · sewee · kusso

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This word has been looked up 263 times.

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Roget's II Roget's II: The New Thesaurus

Allen's Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms

Used in the same context Used in the Same Context

man ·  thing ·  life ·  other ·  officer ·  company ·  nation

Used in the same contextWord Family

people:   peoples ·  peopled
Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary. Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Etymologies (3)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English peple, from Old French pueple, from Latin populus, of Etruscan origin.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (2)

  1. Early modern English also peple; from Middle English peple, pepill, people, peopell, peopyll, poeple, peuple, puple (the spelling with oe or eo being intended to render the Old French diphthong), people, = Middle High German povel, pövel, bovel, G. pöbel = Danish Swedish pöbel, the populace, mob, rabble, from Old French pueple, pople, French peuple = Provencal pobol, poble = Spanish pueblo (later English pueblo) = Portuguese povo = Italian popolo, from Latin populus, the people, the populace; apparently a redupl. of pul, *ple in plebs, the people, plenus = English full, Greek πολύς, many, =English (obsolete) feel, many, full, etc. Hence popular, etc.
  2. from P. peupler = Provencal Spanish poblar = Portuguese povoar = Italian popolare, people, populate, from Middle Latin populare, inhabit, populate; from the noun: see people, n., and cf. populate.
 

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/ˈpipl/
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