populace
21populace — noun Etymology: Middle French, from Italian popolaccio rabble, augmentative of popolo the people, from Latin populus Date: 1572 1. the common people ; masses 2. population …
22populace — /pop yeuh leuhs/, n. 1. the common people of a community, nation, etc., as distinguished from the higher classes. 2. all the inhabitants of a place; population. [1565 75; < F < It popolaccio, equiv. to popol(o) PEOPLE + accio pejorative suffix] * …
23populace — Synonyms and related words: Everyman, John Doe, Public, body politic, bourgeoisie, canaille, citizenry, common man, commonage, commonalty, commoners, commonwealth, community, community at large, constituency, crowd, cultural community, dwellers,… …
24populace — , populous The first describes a general population. The second means heavily populated …
25populace — populous …
26populace — pop·u·lace || pÉ‘pjÉ™lÉ™s / pÉ’pjÊŠl n. common folk, lower class of citizens; population, total inhabitants of a country …
27populace — [ pɒpjʊləs] noun [treated as sing. or plural] the general public. Origin C16: from Fr., from Ital. popolaccio common people …
28populace — n. Commonalty, the people, the crowd, the multitude, the many, the masses, the million, the vulgar herd, the common people, the lower classes, the vulgar, the humbler classes, mob, rabble …
29populace — n 1. general public, commonalty, common people, common folk, commoners, the people, hoi polloi; the masses, the multitude, the Four Million, the great unwashed, the great unnumbered; lower classes, proletariat, .the working class, salt of the… …
30populace — pop·u·lace …