Timonize

verb

verb ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Verb
  1. 1
    To behave as a misanthrope. intransitive

    "I should be tempted to Timonize, and clap a Satyr upon our whole Species."

  2. 2
    To cause (someone) to slide into bitter misanthropy, into Timonism. transitive

    "And it may well be believed, that after the wonderful vital world-revelation so suddenly made to Pierre at the Meadows—a revelation which, at moments, in some certain things, fairly Timonized him—he had not failed to clutch with peculiar nervous detestation and contempt that ample parcel, containing the letters of his Biographico and other silly correspondents, which, in a less ferocious hour, he had filed away as curiosities."

Example

More examples

"I should be tempted to Timonize, and clap a Satyr upon our whole Species."

Etymology

From Timon + -ize, after the 5th-century-BCE person Timon of Athens (as described by Plutarch, Lucian, and Aristophanes), possibly by way of William Shakespeare's play Timon of Athens (c. 1607). Used intransitively by William Darrell in his book The Gentleman Instructed (1713), and transitively by Herman Melville in his novel Pierre (1852).

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.