Dictionary Definition
idiot n : a person of subnormal intelligence
[syn: imbecile,
cretin, moron, changeling, half-wit, retard]
User Contributed Dictionary
Etymology
< idiote < idiota < ιδιώτης (idiotes) "a private citizen", "individual", also "one who has no professional knowledge, layman" and "unpractised, unskilled" < ίδιος (idios) "one's own, pertaining to oneself, private"; used derisively in ancient Athens to refer to one who declined to take part in public life.Noun
- A common term for a person of low general intelligence.
- usage note This may be used pejoratively, as an insult. It is a weak insult, however, and between close friends, family members, or lovers, is often completely nonaggressive.
- A medical or psychological term meaning a person who lacks the capacity to develop beyond the mental age of a normal four-year-old.
Related terms
Translations
idiot
- Basque: ergel
- Chinese: 傻子 (shǎzi), 蠢貨 / 蠢货 (chǔn huò)
- Croatian: idiot
- Danish: idiot
- Dutch: idioot
- English:
- Irish: eejit
- Estonian: idioot
- Finnish: idiootti
- French: idiot
- German: Idiot , Idiotin
- Greek: (1) ηλίθιος (ilíthios) , (2) ιδιώτης (idiotis) , (2) μικρόνους (mikronus)
- Hungarian: idióta
- Hebrew: אידיוט
- Icelandic: hálviti , asni , grasasni , skynskiptingur (obsolete)
- Irish: amadán
- Japanese: 馬鹿 (ばか, baka)
- Korean: 백치 (baekchi)
- Latin: idiota
- Norwegian: idiot
- Polish: idiota
- Portuguese: idiota
- Romanian: idiot , idioată , idioţi p, idioate f|p
- Russian: идиот
- Scottish Gaelic: amadan , òinseach
- Slovak: idiot
- Spanish: idiota
- Swahili: mjinga
- Swedish: idiot
- Turkish: salak
Croatian
Noun
hr-noun mFrench
Pronunciation
- /i.djɔ/, /i.djO/
Noun
Slovak
- In the context of "pejorative|lang=sk": idiot
Derived terms
- idiotický -á -é
- idiotizmus
Swedish
Pronunciation
Noun
idiot- In the context of "pejorative|lang=sk": idiot
Extensive Definition
Idiot is a word derived from the Greek ,
idiōtēs ("person lacking professional skill," "a private citizen,"
"individual"), from , idios ("private," "one's own"). In Latin the word idiota
("ordinary person, layman") preceded the Late Latin
meaning "uneducated or ignorant person." Its modern meaning and
form dates back to Middle
English around the year 1300, from the Old French
idiote ("uneducated or ignorant person"). The related word idiocy
dates to 1487 and may have been analogously modeled on the words
prophet and prophecy. The word has cognates in many other
languages.
History
"Idiot" was originally created to refer to "layman, person lacking professional skill", "person so mentally deficient as to be incapable of ordinary reasoning". Declining to take part in public life, such as democratic government of the polis (city state), such as the Athenian democracy, was considered dishonorable. "Idiots" were seen as having bad judgment in public and political matters. Over time, the term "idiot" shifted away from its original connotation of selfishness and came to refer to individuals with overall bad judgment–individuals who are "stupid". In modern English usage, the terms "idiot" and "idiocy" describe an extreme folly or stupidity, its symptoms (foolish or stupid utterance or deed). In psychology, it is a historical term for the state or condition now called profound mental retardation.Disability
In 19th and early 20th century medicine and psychology, an "idiot" was a person with a very severe mental retardation or a very low IQ level, as a sufferer of cretinism, defining idiots as people whose IQ were below 20 (with a standard deviation of 16);In current medical classification, these people
are now said to have profound mental retardation, and the word
"idiot" is no longer used as a scientific term.
United States law
The California Penal Code Section 26 states that "Idiots" are one of six types of people who are not capable of committing crimes.In several states, "idiots" do not have the right
to vote:
- Arkansas Article III, Section 5
- Iowa Article II, section 5
- Kentucky Section 145
- Mississippi Article 12, Section 241
- New Jersey (Article II, Section 1, Paragraph 6)
- A resolution was passed by the State Legislature in January 2007 to remove "idiot or insane", and to add the qualifying phrase "who has been adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction to lack the capacity to understand the act of voting." As the resolution put it succintly, "This proposed amendment to the Constitution shall be submitted to the people at the next general election occurring more than three months after the final agreement. This constitutional amendment shall become part of the New Jersey Constitution upon approval by the voters." The amendment passed the referendum on November 6, 2007. Hence, "New Jersey" is now crossed out in this list.
- New Mexico Article VII, section 1
- Ohio (Article V, Section 6)
In literature
A few authors have used "idiot" characters in novels, plays and poetry. Often these characters are used to highlight or indicate something else (allegory). Examples of such usage are William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury and William Wordsworth's The Idiot Boy. Idiot characters in literature are often confused with or subsumed within mad or lunatic characters. The most common imbrication between these two categories of mental impairment occurs in the polemic surrounding Edmund from William Shakespeare's King Lear. In Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel The Idiot, the idiocy of the main character, Prince Lev Nikolaievich Myshkin, is attributed more to his honesty, trustfulness, kindness, and humility, than to a lack of intellectual ability. Nietzsche claimed, in his The Antichrist, that Jesus was an idiot. This resulted from his description of Jesus as having an aversion toward the material world.In the novel Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, the
character of Ben, a man who inhabits Rebecca de Winter's former
beach cottage, is referred to as an idiot, because of his childlike
behavior, confusion and anti-social behavior.
In
The House of the Scorpion, some characters are called
"eejits."
Sources and external links
- Dictionary.Reference.Com "Middle English, ignorant person, from Old French idiote (modern French idiot), from Latin idiota, from Greek idiotès, private person, layman, from idios, own, private."
- ProphetProphecy Etymonline "c.1300, "person so mentally deficient as to be incapable of ordinary reasoning," from Old French idiote "uneducated or ignorant person," from Latin idiota "ordinary person, layman," in Late Latin "uneducated or ignorant person," from Greek idiotes "layman, person lacking professional skill," literally "private person," used patronizingly for "ignorant person," from idios "one's own".
- on cretinism
References
idiot in Arabic: معتوه
idiot in Czech: Idiot
idiot in German: Idiot
idiot in Spanish: Idiotez
idiot in Esperanto: Idioto
idiot in Korean: 백치
idiot in Croatian: Idiot
idiot in Dutch: Idioot
idiot in Norwegian: Idiot
idiot in Portuguese: Idiotia
idiot in Russian: Идиотия
idiot in Simple English: Idiot
idiot in Slovak: Hlboká duševná zaostalosť
idiot in Slovenian: Idiot
idiot in Serbian: Идиот
idiot in Finnish: Idiootti
idiot in Swedish: Idiot
idiot in Chinese: 白痴
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alcoholic, aliene, alternating personality,
ament, antisocial
personality, ass, bedlamite, borderline case,
born fool, clot, congenital
idiot, crackbrain,
crackpot, cretin, defective, dement, demoniac, disordered
personality, disturbed personality, donkey, double personality, drug
user, dual personality, dullard, dullhead, dumbbell, dummkopf, dummy, emotionally unstable
personality, energumen, escapist, fanatic, flake, fou, golem, half-wit, hostile
personality, hypochondriac, hypochondriast, ignoramus, imaginary invalid,
imbecile, immature
personality, inadequate personality, inferior personality, jackass, jerk, jester, juggins, kook, loon, loony, lunatic, madman, malade imaginaire,
maladjusted personality, maniac, mentally defective
personality, meshuggenah, mongoloid
idiot, moral insanity, moron, motley, multiple personality,
natural, natural idiot,
natural-born fool, neuropath, neurotic, neurotic personality,
nincompoop, ninny, noncompos, nut, paranoid personality, perverse
personality, phrenetic, psychoneurotic, psychopath, psychopathic
personality, psychotic, psychotic
personality, raving lunatic, schizoid, schizoid personality,
screwball, seclusive
personality, sexual psychopath, shut-in personality, simp, simpleton, sociopath, split personality,
stupid, tomfool, valetudinarian, valetudinary, weak
personality, weirdo,
zany