worldwise
See also: world-wise
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English worldwis, from Old English woruldwīs (“worldwise, worldly-wise, learned”), equivalent to world + wise.
Adjective
worldwise (comparative more worldwise, superlative most worldwise)
- Knowledgeable about the world; worldly-wise; sophisticated; experienced.
- 1671, Basilius Valentinus, chapter 3, in Daniel Cable, transl., Of Natural and Supernatural Things, London: Moses Pitt, page 50:
- Those who are highly conceited, illuminated, and world-wise, hate, envy, scandalize, defame and persecute this Mystery to the utmost Rind, or innermost Kernel, which hath its beginning out of the Center […]
- 1891, Arthur Conan Doyle, chapter 12, in The White Company, London: Smith, Elder & Co., published 1909, page 141:
- An older and more world-wise man might have been puzzled by her varying moods, her sudden prejudices, her quick resentment at all constraint and authority.
- 1919, Saki, “The Purple of the Balkan Kings”, in The Toys of Peace and Other Papers, London: John Lane, page 281:
- Luttpold Wolkenstein, financier and diplomat on a small, obtrusive, self-important scale, sat in his favoured café in the world-wise Habsburg capital, confronted with the Neue Freie Presse and the cup of cream-topped coffee and attendant glass of water that a sleek-headed piccolo had just brought him.
- 1994, U.S. News & World Report:
- Experience that’s worldwide and worldwise. It’s a difference that’s helped us make friends with a world full of travelers.
Derived terms
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