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courtier
[kawr-tee-er, kohr-]
noun
a person who is often in attendance at the court of a king or other royal personage.
a person who seeks favor by flattery, charm, etc.
courtier
/ ˰ģÉ˳ŁÉŖÉ /
noun
an attendant at a court
a person who seeks favour in an ingratiating manner
Other 51³Ō¹Ļ Forms
- undercourtier noun
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins
Origin of courtier1
Example Sentences
āWashington has become Neroās court, with an incendiary emperor, submissive courtiers, and a ketamine-fueled buffoon in charge of purging the civil service.ā
Praise for Trumpās tariff policy has been largely concentrated among his Cabinet members and other courtiers.
Itās worse than that: Like Stalinās inner circle or a Bourbon kingās courtiers, Trumpās factotums seek to outdo each other in embracing absurd, impossible, offensive and dangerous ideas.
But thereās something dingy and gross, like mottled drifts of old snow, about the overweening influence of Trumpās courtiers and their grubbing relationship with a president so obviously enamored of money and flattery.
The courtiers have their divergent views and disagreements with each other and they have to get as close as possible to the man in the center of it all for their agenda to win out.
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