demagogracy

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

demagogue + -cracy

Noun

demagogracy (plural not attested)

  1. Alternative form of demagocracy
    • 1903, Charles Chauncey Binney, The Life of Horace Binney: With Selections from His Letters, page 381:
      He saw, and I think I see, that there may be more republicanism in a monarchy than there is sometimes in a democracy, which may be only another name for demagogracy.
    • 1948, Robert Graves, The White Goddess: A Historical Grammar of Poetic Myth, page 470:
      The main religious problem of the Western world is, briefly, how to exchange demagogracy, disguised as democracy, for a non-hereditary aristocracy whose leaders will be inspired to choose rightly on every occasion , instead of blindly following authoritarian procedure.
    • 2002, J. Lilly, The Last Carnival, page 58:
      “Semi-senile, horny-legged, cunning, indefatigable curmudgeonsof-the-sea, tail-baiting their hooks with the spoils of demagogracy, toiling endangered citizenries, political tinkers in the tangle of their griftnets.
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