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magnate
[ mag-neyt, -nit ]
noun
- a person of great influence, importance, or standing in a particular enterprise, field of business, etc.:
a railroad magnate.
- a person of eminence or distinction in any field:
literary magnates.
- a member of the former upper house in either the Polish or Hungarian parliament.
magnate
/ ˈmæɡneɪt; -nɪt /
noun
- a person of power and rank in any sphere, esp in industry
- history a great nobleman
- (formerly) a member of the upper chamber in certain European parliaments, as in Hungary
Derived Forms
- ˈmagnateˌship, noun
Other Words From
- magnate·ship noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of magnate1
Example Sentences
The Glock family feud gets messier with new court documents alleging that gun magnate Gaston had a detective follow his ex-wife.
The most shadowy among them, according to Ukrainskaya Pravda, was a 28-year-old gas magnate named Sergiy Kurchenko.
“I think Scott Walker has come a long way,” added John Catsimatidis, a supermarket magnate who backed Romney in 2012.
When cosmetics magnate Stanley Picker died in 1982, he left behind a gorgeous house and notable art collection.
Then she helped press magnate Rupert Murdoch crush organized-labor opposition in his Wapping facilities.
In the late eighties he returned to his native island, settled at Peel, and became a magnate there.
I had attempted the life of a great magnate; in him capitalism felt itself attacked.
Good Heavens, was that uncouth figure the voluble, buoyant, flashy magnate of the old days?
His smile softened the words which struck upon the ear of the magnate with an unaccustomed sound.
I have come direct from Odessa, where I have had a talk with the Russian wheat magnate.
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