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  1. Oct 4, 2010 · Analyze does have the -ize/-ise suffix, just a different spelling. From the OED: "On Greek analogies the vb. would have been analysize, Fr. analysiser, of which analyser was practically a shortened form, since, though following the analogy of pairs like annexe, annexe-r, it rested chiefly on the fact that by form-assoc. it appeared already to belong to the series of factitive vbs. in -iser ...

  2. Jul 8, 2011 · A citizen of the United States is a legal resident who has been processed by the government as being a member of the United States. A denizen of the United States is simply someone that lives there. Technically speaking, one could never be, for example, a citizen of the Earth -- but we're all denizens of the Earth.

  3. EgaVS. 13 3. 2. A citizen is someone who currently possesses citizenship. I'm as citizen of the US because I have US citizenship. It's not short for anything. It is it's own word. Both nouns with similar, different meanings. – Hank.

  4. Jan 26, 2017 · USA. "American" covers a lot more ground - Mexicans and Canadians are Americans, and some of them object strenuously to equating "American" to "citizen of the USA". Not to mention Brazilians, Ecuadoreans, etc., all of whom are Americans. Plus, as a legal matter, the name of the country is not "America".

  5. 3. Addressing someone as "Citizen" (as opposed to first name, last name, or other title) can imply an emphasis on their service to/position in a possibly-totalitarian state. This is the use of "Citizen" in the video game Half-Life 2, for example. Share. Improve this answer. Follow. answered Jun 14, 2011 at 18:13.

  6. Mar 22, 2015 · Citizen, as here compared, ... applies to a resident of a city or town, especially to one of full age who enjoys the right to vote and other privileges; [example omitted]. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Synonyms (1984) has a nearly identical treatment of the first three words, suggesting that the distinctions didn't change much (in MW's opinion) over the intervening 42 years.

  7. Jul 22, 2017 · OED has a note on citizen: The semantic development has been influenced by classical Latin cīvis (see civic adj.) It seems like the semantic drift in citizen, civilian, civic, etc. from "city-dweller" to one with legal rights within any governed community involves both legal and military history.

  8. Jun 29, 2016 · Edit To my understanding, a 'citizen' is an individual person, 'citizens' a number of them, and a 'citizenry' a conceptual singular actor directed by popular will. Since individuals living under particular constitutional arrangements might be designated subjects but not citizens, is there a word that describes a collective entity that is similar to a citizenry but composed of people with the ...

  9. Nov 18, 2014 · If a citizen of Nigeria is a Nigerian, what is a citizen of Niger referred to as?. The Wikipedia article on Niger and the online Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries say that the proper term is Nigerien, as Vogel612 points out below.

  10. Sep 14, 2014 · By analogy with U.S. citizen, you think you can say China citizen, but Chinese citizen blocks it. U.S. citizen is different either because it predates American citizen or it means something different. e.g., it's shorthand for the legal term "citizen of the United States" (see below).

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