nonperson
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]nonperson (plural nonpersons or nonpeople)
- Not a real person; a subhuman.
- 1989, Michael C. Kearl, Endings: A Sociology of Death and Dying, page 146:
- As all lives must end, do you prefer to die as a nonperson, forgotten in a nursing home and totally stripped of dignity and independence?
- 1994, Lisa J. McIntyre, Law in the Sociological Enterprise, page 92:
- Arguably, what is so hateful about a hate crime is that it is an attempt by some individual or group to treat a Person as a Nonperson.
- 1998, John E. Tropman, Does America Hate the Poor?, page 6:
- How does hate work? [...] One answer is that the poor person (or the Jew, or the Asian, or the Native American, or whoever) becomes, intellectually, linguistically, and emotionally, a "lessperson," and then a nonperson.
- Something other than a person; an object.
- 1995, Roger K. R. Thompson, “Natural and Relational Concepts in Animals”, in Comparative Approaches to Cognitive Science, page 179:
- Taken together, all the results suggested that discrimination of person from nonperson slides was not controlled by an obvious single stimulus feature.
- 2001, Eric T. Olson, “A Compound of Two Substances”, in Soul, Body, and Survival, page 77:
- No nonperson is psychologically indistinguishable from you.
- 2002, Ritva Laury, “Interaction, grounding, and third-person referential forms”, in Frank Brisard, editor, Grounding: The Epistemic Footing of Deixis and Reference, page 85:
- For example, Benveniste [...] discusses the connection of first- and second-person pronouns with the speech situation, and even goes as far as to claim that the third person is a nonperson, since the referents of third-person pronouns are not speech-act participants.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]not a real person; a subhuman
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