† peˈdante, -ˈantie, -ˈanty Obs.
Also 6–7 pæd-, 7 -ti, -tee.
[app. a. It. pedante pedant (cf. county2); the ending being afterwards assimilated to Eng. -ie, -y, whence app. sense 2.]
1. = pedant.
| 1593 R. Harvey Philad. 9 Why should not a Moonke be as credible as a Pædanty? 1605 Bacon Adv. Learn. i. ii. §3 So was the state of Rome..in the handes of Seneca a Pedanti. 1625 J. Phillips Way to Heaven A iij b, Rated, as if it had beene a Schoole-boy, by some austere Pedantee. 1630 S. Lennard tr. Charron's Wisd. (1658) 142 The Pedantie or houshold school master. |
2. A company of pedants. rare—1.
| 1641 Milton Animadv. i. 56 You cite them to appeare..before a capricious Pædantie of hot-liver'd Grammarians. |