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-cracy
- a combining form occurring in loanwords from Greek ( aristocracy; democracy ); on this model used, with the meaning “rule,” “government,” “governing body,” to form abstract nouns from stems of other origin:
mobocracy; bureaucracy.
-cracy
combining form
- indicating a type of government or rule See also -crat
mobocracy
plutocracy
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of -cracy1
Example Sentences
“Demo”cracy: We have the beta version.
This promise is at the heart of the American identity: it is anchored by founding fathers Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, scientists and inventors both, extolled by Alexis de Tocqueville in his 1835 masterwork Democracy in America, embodied in the inventions of Thomas Edison, and codified in its modern form in Science, The Endless Frontier, Vannevar Bush’s famous 1945 science-policy report to President Franklin D. Roosevelt, which laid out the still-powerful argument for government sponsorship of basic science.
The backers had a hard time understanding this; they continued to operate under the shared assumption that more democracy, more engagement and more transparency lead inexorably to more success.
The protesters, mostly students but also some academics, are targeting a law passed by the Greek parliament last August that seeks to introduce more meritocracy, dynamism and accountability to Greece’s rigid higher-education system.
Words having the following terminations are usually accented on the antepenult, or third syllable from the end: cracy, ferous, fluent, flous, honal, gony, grapher, graphy, loger, logist, logy, loquy, machy, mathy, meter, metry, nomy, nomy, parous, pathy, phony, scopy, strophe, tomy, trophy, vomous, vorous.
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Words That Use -cracy
What does -cracy mean?
The combining form -cracy is used like a suffix meaning “rule” or “government.” It is often used in technical terms, especially in sociology.
The form -cracy comes from Greek krátos, meaning “rule” and “strength.”
What are variants of -cracy?
While -cracy doesn’t have any variants, it is related to the form -crat, as in plutocrat. Want to know more? Read our Words That Use -crat article.
Examples of -cracy
An example of a familiar word that features -cracy is democracy, “government by the people.” Democracy comes from Greek dēmokratía, which uses the equivalent form of -cracy.
The demo- part of the word means “people,” from Greek dêmos, while the form -cracy means “government.” Democracy literally translates to “people’s government.”
What are some words that use the combining form -cracy?
- aristocracy (using the equivalent form of -cracy in Greek)
- bureaucracy
- gerontocracy
- kakistocracy
- meritocracy
- plutocracy (using the equivalent form of -cracy in Greek)
- technocracy
- theocracy
What are some other forms that -cracy may be commonly confused with?
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