Dictionary Definition
abecedarian adj : alphabetically arranged (as for
beginning readers)
Noun
1 a novice learning the rudiments of some
subject
2 a 16th century sect of Anabaptists centered in
Germany who had an absolute disdain for human knowledge
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
Etymology
Latin abecedarius. A word from the first four letters of the alphabet.Noun
abecedarian (plural: abecedarians)Adjective
abecedarian- Pertaining to, or formed by, the letters of the alphabet; alphabetic; hence, rudimentary.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Abecedarians were a 16th century
German sect
of Anabaptists who
affected an absolute disdain for all human knowledge, contending
that God would
enlighten his elect from within themselves, giving them knowledge
of necessary truths by visions and ecstasies, with which human
learning would interfere.
They rejected every other means of instruction,
and claimed that to be saved one must even be ignorant of the first
letters of the alphabet; whence their name,
A-B-C-darians. They also considered the study of theology as a species of
idolatry, and regarded
learned men who did any preaching as falsifiers of God's
word.
Nicholas
Storch led this sect, preaching that the teaching of the
Holy
Spirit was all that was necessary. Andreas
Karlstadt adopted these views, abandoned his title of doctor
and became a street porter.
Later uses
- University of North Carolina used the term to name a study of early childhood education.
In a 19th-century American one-room
school, an abecedarian or a-b-c-darian
was a student in the youngest group of scholars in the typical
one-room
school of 19th-century America, so-called because they were
just learning their “a-b-cs.”
In his autobiographical reminiscences on his
school days, Warren Burton recounted that he “was three years and a
half old when I first entered the Old School-house as an
abecedarian.”http://books.google.com/books?id=4CcvFsc81fsC&printsec=frontcover&dq=warren+burton&lr=#PPA5,M1
Noah
Webster’s early school dictionary contains the following entry
for abecedarian: A-be-ce-da'-ri-an, n. One who teaches or is
learning the alphabet.
http://books.google.com/books?id=RsURAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=noah+webster+dictionary&lr=#PPA7,M1
External links
abecedarian in Spanish: Abecedarianos
abecedarian in Italian:
Abecedarianismo
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aboriginal, allographic, alphabetarian, alphabetic, antenatal, apprentice, articled clerk,
autochthonous,
beginner, beginning, boot, budding, capital, catechumen, certified
teacher, creative,
dabbler, debutant, dilettante, docent, doctor, dominie, don, educationist, educator, elemental, elementary, embryonic, entrant, fellow, fetal, fledgling, formative, foundational, freshman, fundamental, gestatory, graphemic, greenhorn, guide, guru, ideographic, ignoramus, in embryo, in its
infancy, in the bud, inaugural, inceptive, inchoate, inchoative, incipient, incunabular, inductee, infant, infantile, initial, initiate, initiative, initiatory, instructor, introductory, inventive, lettered, lexigraphic, literal, logogrammatic, logographic, lower-case,
maestro, majuscule, master, melamed, mentor, minuscular, minuscule, mullah, nascent, natal, neophyte, new boy, newcomer, nonprofessional,
novice, novitiate, original, pandit, parturient, pedagogist, pedagogue, pictographic, postnatal, postulant, preceptor, pregnant, prenatal, primal, primary, prime, primeval, primitive, primogenial, probationer, probationist, procreative, professor, pundit, rabbi, raw recruit, recruit, rookie, rudimental, rudimentary, schoolkeeper, schoolmaster, schoolteacher, smatterer, starets, teacher, tenderfoot, transliterated, tyro, uncial, upper-case, ur