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Meaning of Pugilist | Babel Free

Noun CEFR B2
ˈpjuː.d͡ʒɪlɪst

Definitions

  1. One who fights with their fists, especially a professional prize fighter; a boxer.
  2. One who engages in rhetorical attacks, for himself or on behalf of another.

Equivalents

Català boxador boxejador
Čeština boxer
Cymraeg bocsiwr paffiwr
Deutsch Boxer Boxerin
Ελληνικά μποξέρ πυγμάχος
Español boxeador boxeadora
Français boxeur
Gaeilge dornálaí
עברית מתאגרף
Íslenska boxari hnefaleikari
Italiano boxeur pugile
Қазақша боксшы
한국어 복서
Latina pugil
Română boxer
Русский боксёр
Kiswahili bondia
ไทย นักมวย
Türkçe boksör
Українська боксер

Examples

“I laugh and hoot at ye, ye cricket-players, ye pugilists, ye deaf Burkes and blind Bendigoes!”
“In 1925, boxer shorts were unleashed on the world: loose-fitting underwear for men, featuring an elastic waistband inspired by the shorts worn by boxers. It was underwear for the inner pugilist.”
“President Obama's style leaves liberal activists in the Democratic Party cold. They prefer a pugilist fighting for principle over a pragmatist agreeing to compromises. Can the president reignite the enthusiasm of his party's core supporters by November?”
“A pugilist for the modern movement in the arts, [Edith] Sitwell was often in demand as a speaker, and she could fill a room. On 8 May 1923, she debated with the poet Alfred Noyes at the London School of Economics to raise money for the Hospitals of London Appeal. Sitwell associated Noyes with J. C. Squire and once remarked that his work was like cheap linoleum: 'they have the same kind of smoothness!' Edmund Gosse, the chairman, asked Noyes beforehand to take it easy: '"'Do not, I beg of you, use a weaver's beam on the head of poor Edith."" Noyes did win the opening round. Sitwell, wearing gold laurels, asked if she could bring her supporters to the platform; Noyes agreed on the condition that he could bring his. When asked who they were, he answered blandly, '"Oh, Virgil, Horace, Dante, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, and a few others." Sitwell opened her lecture, 'In their day, Keats and Shelley were the most persecuted of poets, and Tom Moore was the most popular. In our days, my brothers and I are the most persecuted of poets, and,' pointing an accusing finger at her opponent, 'Mr Noyes..." At that point laughter drowned out her words. She went on to deliver a scripted talk on how all great poets are innovators in their time and that she was glad to join them in the asylum to which their contemporaries assigned them.”
“Matthew Poole (1624-1679) was a zealous Presbyterian whose acumen as a biblical commentator was admired across the confessional divide in England. Born in York, Poole entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in July 1645; his theological acuity was widely recognized. Upon graduation in 1649, Poole took the rectory at St. Michael-le-Querne. It was a living belonging to Anthony Tuckney, the master at Emmanuel while Poole had been a student. Formally adopting a Presbyterian ecclesial identity and enlisting himself as a pugilist for the cause of orthodoxy, which was sine qua non in the task of completing what was then known as "the second Reformation," Poole responded to Biddle's antitrinitarian heresy and published ΒΛΑΣΦΗΜΟΚΤΟΝΙΑ: The Blasphemer Slaine with the Sword of the Spirit in 1653. It proved to be an influential text, requiring his publisher, fellow Presbyterian John Rothwell, to publish the second and revised edition in 1654. As is to be expected from a man steeped in philology and text-critical studies, Poole offered a trenchant critique of Biddle. Again, similar to Nicholas Estwick, the focus was on shoring up the deity of the Holy Spirit.”
“Mr. Patel has a long record as a fierce pugilist for Mr. Trump, pushing some of the pro-Trump orbit’s most dubious theories[.]”
“President Nixon tried to make leaders of communist bloc countries believe he was a volatile, irrational pugilist.”

CEFR level

B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
See all B2 English words →

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