Ivory tower

//ˈaɪvəɹi ˈtaʊə// adj, noun

Definitions

Adjective
  1. 1
    Separated from reality and practical matters; overly academic.

    "The majority of librarians appear to have shown a very ivory tower approach to the application of all types of management technique to librarianship."

Noun
  1. 1
    A sheltered, overly-academic existence or perspective, implying a disconnection or lack of awareness of reality or practical considerations. idiomatic

    "Such a proposal looks fine from an ivory tower, but it could never work in real life."

  2. 2
    a state of mind that is discussed as if it were a place wordnet

Etymology

Etymology 1

Calque of French tour d'ivoire, based on a biblical phrase, coined by Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve to compare the poet Alfred de Vigny (more isolated) with Victor Hugo (more socially engaged). First attested in English in a translation of Laughter by French philosopher Henri Bergson (1911). The term was popularized in The Ivory Tower (1917) by Henry James, though used in different sense (millionaires, not professors).

Etymology 2

Calque of French tour d'ivoire, based on a biblical phrase, coined by Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve to compare the poet Alfred de Vigny (more isolated) with Victor Hugo (more socially engaged). First attested in English in a translation of Laughter by French philosopher Henri Bergson (1911). The term was popularized in The Ivory Tower (1917) by Henry James, though used in different sense (millionaires, not professors).

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