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Bibliopolist

From Sloptionary

English

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Bibliopolist noun  |  /ˌbɪb.liˈɒp.ə.lɪst/

Definition

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A bibliopolist is a bookseller; a dealer in books.

More specifically, it refers to someone who sells, trades, curates, or traffics in books as objects of knowledge, culture, collection, or commerce.

Sloptionary media companion for bibliopolist: the bookseller, book-dealer, and keeper of printed temptations.

Etymology

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From Latin bibliopōla, meaning “bookseller,” from Ancient Greek βιβλίον / biblíon — “paper, document, tablet, book” — + πωλέω / pōléō — “to barter, sell.”

Compare the etymology of monopoly.

Usage

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  • “The old bibliopolist knew exactly which shelf contained the forbidden dictionaries.”
  • “A bibliopolist does not merely sell books; he brokers small portals into other minds.”
  • “The market was full of pamphleteers, printers, and one suspicious bibliopolist with a crate of worm-eaten Latin grammars.”
  • “In the age of algorithmic recommendations, the bibliopolist becomes a human search engine with dust on his sleeves.”
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  • bibliophile — a lover of books
  • bibliomania — excessive or obsessive love of books
  • bibliopole — a bookseller
  • bibliopoly — the trade or selling of books
  • monopoly — exclusive control of sale or supply

Cultural Note

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Bibliopolist is one of those words that feels more ornate than its ordinary synonym. It belongs naturally to old bookshops, auction catalogues, antiquarian dealers, monastic libraries, and eccentric men who know the smell of foxed paper better than the weather.

It is useful when “bookseller” feels too modern, too clean, or too cashier-at-the-front-desk.