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See also: Elder Statesman

English

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Noun

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elder statesman (plural elder statesmen)

  1. A prominent and respected elderly political leader.
    • 1905 October 5, “A Review of the World”, in Current Literature, volume 39, number 4, page 364:
      Thus Ito, according to some interpreters of modern Japan, practically ceased to rank as an "elder statesman" when he consented to lead the political combination known as the Sei-yu-kai.
    • 1958, T. S. Eliot, The Elder Statesman[1]:
      Mrs. Carghill. At bottom, I believe you're still the same silly Richard / You always were. You wanted to pose / As a man of the world. And now you're posing / As what? I presume, as an elder statesman; / And the difference between being an elder statesman / And posing successfully as an elder statesman / Is practically negligible. / And you look the part.
    • 2012, David Torrance, David Steel: Rising Hope to Elder Stateman:
      Michael Foot was speaking affectionately when in 1979 he quipped that David Steel had apparently gone from 'rising hope to elder statesman' without any intervening period whatsoever.
    • 2023, Katja Hoyer, Beyond the Wall: East Germany, 1949–1990, Random House, →ISBN, page 249:
      While Ulbricht technically remained in office as Chairman of the State Council, a position that ostensibly gave him a role as elder statesman, he was sidelined by Honecker with systematic ruthlessness.
    • 2024 July 22, Glenn Thrush, “Why Obama Hasn’t Endorsed Harris”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
      The former president has positioned himself as an impartial elder statesman above intraparty machinations and was neutral during the 2020 Democratic primaries.
  2. (by extension) A prominent and respected person in a specified field who is elderly or who has been in the field for a long time.
    • 1962, United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, Developments in the Field of Detection and Identification of Nuclear Explosions (Project Vela) and Relationship to Test Ban Negotiations, page 9:
      I would classify him in this field as an elder statesman and a very knowledgeable and brilliant scientist, and useful for consulting purposes, but he is not directly working on Project Vela.
    • 2004, Mark Andresen, Field of Vision: The Broadcast Life of Kenneth Allsop, page 458:
      With the average age of the new production team under thirty, he found himself in the unenviable position of BBC Current Affairs elder statesman.
    • 2020, Merlin Sheldrake, Entangled Life, page 19:
      The 'loss of a sense of self-identity, delusions of self-identity and experiences of "alien control"', observed an elder statesman in the field of microbiome research, are all potential symptoms of mental illness.

Descendants

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  • German: Elder Statesman

Translations

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