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speculant. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
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English
Noun
speculant (plural speculants)
- A speculator; one who makes speculative (high-risk) investments.
1935, Monthly Review, page 306:They moreover also belonged to those securities which speculants neglected at the beginning, which is perhaps sufficiently explained by the position of the rubber market and by the rubber price.
1994, The European Monetary System During the Phase of Transition to European Monetary Union: Future Scenarios and Various Reform Options, page 85:The thereby reduced inter currency interest rate in favour of the attacked currency decreases the financing costs of the speculants and, therefore, further increases the incentive to speculate.
2001, Swami Agnivesh, “Striving for a Truly Spiritual Culture”, in Joseph A. Camilleri, editor, Religion and culture in Asia Pacific: Violence or Healing?, Vista Publications, →ISBN, page 137:How much further do we plan to bow to the gurus of Wall Street, to the speculants in Tokyo and London?
2014, Peter Leoni, The Greeks and Hedging Explained:A third example would be a speculant that enters into the market purely on a direction view.
- A profiteer or illegal trader.
1915 September, “The Situation in Palestine”, in The Maccabæan: A Magazine of Jewish Life and Letters, volume 27, number 3, page 78:In this way the danger threatening the population from unscrupulous speculants was averted and the prices were kept down.
1994, Anders Johansson, Emancipation and Interdependence, page 163:There were many agents among the Russian speculants.
2019, Alina-Sandra Cucu, Planning Labour: Time and the Foundations of Industrial Socialism in Romania (International Studies in Social History; volume 32), Berghahn Books, →ISBN:For instance, on 6 July 1945, authorities stated that the saboteurs and the speculants ‘will be hit without mercy’.
- One who thinks about speculative subjects; one who dreams, extrapolates, or conjectures.
1882 January 11, T. Jones, “Economy in Cutting”, in The Weekly record of fashion, volume 7, number 316, page 9:To shew that the plan is not the vague dream of a speculant, Mr. Jones sent full-sized patterns pinned on a sheet of paper cut exactly to the length and width of material stated.
1890, Alfred Edersheim, Ella Edersheim, Tohu-Va-Vohu , page 118:This supposed possibility is straightway converted into an actuality, with no better support than that it has occurred as a possibility to the brain of a speculant.
1976, Prix Jeunesse, Fernsehen und Bildung, Television and Socialization Processes in the Family:The "gap in between" is thus often occupied by speculants and speculations which are neither in line with research results nor in line with practical considerations.
2018, Amir Levinson, Fireworks in a Dark Universe, World Scientific, page 287:On more abstract levels, scientists are trying to understand the connection between black holes and information theory and holography, and speculants are investigating whether wormholes can serve as a basis for the construction of time machines and whether the universe in which we live is one of many universes (estimated at 10500) in a multiverse.
Adjective
speculant (comparative more speculant, superlative most speculant)
- Speculative or hopefully wondering.
1843, Bernard M- (of S-), A Dream of a Queen's Reign., page 1:I essayed to arise out of my chair, that I might render a beseeming homage unto so excellent a presence but was prevented; amazement having fixed me agaze and half risen, as a statue of wonder; leaving to mine eyes only the power of a speculant admiration.
1907, John Halsham, Lonewood Corner: A Countryman's Horizons, page 13:In the new order of things—four years still leaves it new to a slow-moulded temperament—a feeling of detachment which is an old failing grows stronger, a sense of walking about among my kind, speculant, aloof.
1984, Emily Grosholz, The River Painter: Poems:Banks stocked with fishers are richer in dreams than signs of fish; the lines lead under uncircled surfaces sharp into fathoms of speculant green.
Dutch
Etymology
From speculeren + -ant.
Pronunciation
Noun
speculant m (plural speculanten, diminutive speculantje n)
- speculator
Descendants
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from German Spekulant.
Noun
speculant m (plural speculanți)
- speculator
Declension