idiocrasy
1Idiocrasy — Id i*oc ra*sy, n.; pl. {Idiocrasies}. [Idio + Gr. kra^sis a mixture, fr. ? to mix: cf. F. idiocrasie.] Peculiarity of constitution; that temperament, or state of constitution, which is peculiar to a person; idiosyncrasy …
2idiocrasy — index characteristic, quality (attribute), quirk (idiosyncrasy) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
3idiocrasy — (n.) peculiarity, 1680s, from Gk. idiokrasia, from idio (see IDIO (Cf. idio )) + krasis mixing, tempering …
4idiocrasy — idiocratic /id ee euh krat ik/, idiocratical, adj. idiocratically, adv. /id ee ok reuh see/, n., pl. idiocrasies. idiosyncrasy. [1675 85; < Gk idiokrasía, equiv. to idio IDIO + krasia, equiv. to krâs(is) mixture (see CRASIS) + ia Y3; see… …
5idiocrasy — n. idiosyncrasy, individual quality, unique characteristic, peculiarity, eccentricity; specific aspect of the physiology of an individual …
6idiocrasy — n. Peculiarity, idiosyncrasy, peculiar temperament …
7idiocrasy — id·i·oc·ra·sy …
8idiocrasy — n. constitutional peculiarity. ♦ idiocratic, a …
9idiocrasy — ˌidēˈäkrəsē noun ( es) Etymology: Late Greek idiokrasia, probably MS variant of Greek idiosynkrasia idiosyncrasy more at idiosyncrasy : peculiarity of constitution : idiosyncrasy …
10Idiocrasies — Idiocrasy Id i*oc ra*sy, n.; pl. {Idiocrasies}. [Idio + Gr. kra^sis a mixture, fr. ? to mix: cf. F. idiocrasie.] Peculiarity of constitution; that temperament, or state of constitution, which is peculiar to a person; idiosyncrasy …