The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural Georgians
(uncountable) The language of Georgia, a country in Eastern Europe and Western Asia. examples
(countable) A person or a descendant of a person from Georgia, a country in Eastern Europe and Western Asia. examples
(countable) A native or resident of the state of Georgia in the United States of America. examples
not comparable
Of, from, or pertaining to the Eastern European country of Georgia, the Georgian people or the Georgian language. quotations examples
As in their narrow defeat of Argentina last week, England were indisciplined at the breakdown, and if Georgian fly-half Merab Kvirikashvili had remembered his kicking boots, Johnson's side might have been behind at half-time.
2011 September 18, Ben Dirs, “Rugby World Cup 2011: England 41 – 10 Georgia”, in BBC Sport, archived from the original on 10 June 2016
Of, from, or pertaining to the U.S. State of Georgia or its Georgian English dialect. examples
plural Georgians
(historical) A British citizen during the reign of a king named George.
comparative more Georgian, superlative most Georgian
Of, from, or characteristic of the reigns of Kings George I and George II of Great Britain, and George III and George IV of the United Kingdom (1714–1830). examples
Pertaining to or characteristic of Stefan George (a German poet). quotations examples
The same Georgian persona, leonine and sacerdotal (that of the aristocratic priest) appears throughout the reminiscences of all his disciples.
2001, Martin Travers, Critics of Modernity: The Literature of the Conservative Revolution in Germany, 1890–1933, page 82
Another example of this sterile Georgian orthodoxy is to be found in the case of Ernst Morwitz ...
2005, Ernst Osterkamp, “The Legacy of the George Circle”, in Exile, Science and Bildung: The Contested Legacies of German Emigre Intellectuals, page 23
Kantorowicz […] warns against confusing a Georgian aesthetic “secret Germany,” which still slumbered in concealment, with contemporary, ‘awakened’ Nazi Germany.
2012, Paul Fleming, “Bodies: Ernst H. Kantorowicz”, in “Escape to Life”: German Intellectuals in New York: A Compendium on Exile after 1933, page 227