postmillennial
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From post- + millennial.
Adjective
postmillennial (comparative more postmillennial, superlative most postmillennial)
- (Christianity) Pertaining to the belief that the Second Coming will take place after the millennium. [from 19th c.]
- 1990, Murray N. Rothbard, Karl Marx: Communist as Religious Eschatologist, Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, , →ISBN, pages 123–179:
- And just as for postmillennial Christians, man, led by God's prophets and saints, will establish a Kingdom of God on Earth (for premillennials, Jesus will have many human assistants in setting up such a kingdom), so, for Marx and other schools of communists, mankind, led by a vanguard of secular saints, will establish a secularized Kingdom of Heaven on earth.
- Pertaining to the period following the year 1000 or (now more usually) following the year 2000. [from 20th c.]
- Antonym: premillennial
- Following the millennial generation; relating to Generation Z.
- 2020 February 7, Melanie Gerlis, quoting Avery Singer, “Avery Singer: the artist breathing fresh life into painting”, in Financial Times:
- “I want to get into the heads of people younger than me, to be postmillennial,” she says. “I look at different Instagram influencers, at the music and the music scene, to try to understand it all.”
Noun
postmillennial (plural postmillennials)
- A member of the generation following the millennials; a Gen-Zer.
- 2015 December 2, “The Founders, the Plurals, iGen or ReGen – what should we call the post-millennials?”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- The Founders, the Plurals, iGen or ReGen – what should we call the post-millennials?
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.