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Democracy   /dɪmˈɑkrəsi/   Listen
Democracy

noun
(pl. democracies)
1.
The political orientation of those who favor government by the people or by their elected representatives.
2.
A political system in which the supreme power lies in a body of citizens who can elect people to represent them.  Synonyms: commonwealth, republic.
3.
The doctrine that the numerical majority of an organized group can make decisions binding on the whole group.  Synonym: majority rule.



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"Democracy" Quotes from Famous Books



... refer to the "nine nations of Manhinyans, gathered between Manhattan and the environs of Quebec." These several nations have never been accurately designated, although certain general divisions appear under the titles of Mohegan, Wappinger, Sequins, etc. "The government of the Mahicans was a democracy. The office was hereditary by the lineage of the wife; that is, the selection of a successor on the death of the chief, was confined to the female branch of the family." According to Ruttenber, the precise relation between the Mahicans of the Hudson and the Mohegans under Uncas, the Pequot chief, ...
— The Hudson - Three Centuries of History, Romance and Invention • Wallace Bruce

... at the feet of the lovely daughter of Democracy, but with that smile whose sweetness is a marvel to all men, she shook ...
— The Bacillus of Beauty - A Romance of To-day • Harriet Stark

... challenge the almost solid cohorts of pro-slavery Democracy in California was David C. Broderick, United States Senator from 1857 until his untimely death in 1859. Broderick was the son of a stone cutter and in early life followed his father's trade. Born in Washington, D. C., he grew to manhood in New York City. When ...
— Starr King in California • William Day Simonds

... Luther's return to Wittenberg, the flood of democracy was rising among the people. He had opened the monasteries; now the people called for redress against many other social evils, such as the misery of the peasants, the tithes, the traffic in benefices, the bad administration of justice. ...
— The German Classics Of The Nineteenth And Twentieth Centuries, Volume 12 • Various

... encouraged in school will always be found operating in the solution of problems which occur outside of school, but the school which insists merely upon memory and upon following instructions may scarcely claim to have made any considerable contribution to the equipment of citizens of a democracy who should solve their common problems in terms of the evidence presented. The unthinking acceptance of the words of the book or the statement of the teacher prepares the way for the blind following of the boss, for faith in the ...
— How to Teach • George Drayton Strayer and Naomi Norsworthy


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