Populace is usually used to refer to all the people of a country. Thus, we're often told that an educated and informed populace is essential for a healthy American democracy. Franklin D. Roosevelt's famous radio "Fireside Chats" informed and reassured the American populace in the 1930s as we struggled through the Great Depression. We often hear about what "the general populace" is thinking or doing, but generalizing about something so huge can be tricky.
The populace has suffered greatly.
high officials awkwardly mingling with the general populace
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In the Eaton Fire zone, Latinos represent 27% of the populace but 35% of workers.—Marc Ramirez, USA TODAY, 29 Jan. 2025 Much to the amazement of the local populace, the eggs kept popping out—until it was discovered that the owner was writing the words and reinserting the eggs into the hapless hen’s cloaca.—Arthur Krystal, The New Yorker, 27 Jan. 2025 Voltaire noted that thousands of people are already being repatriated from the Dominican Republic every week and gangs are terrorizing the populace.—Trisha Thomas, Los Angeles Times, 26 Jan. 2025 Photo: Alamy The new JPMorgan Chase tower rising in midtown looks designed for the Harkonnen — dark, shiny, cantilevered to loom over the populace, and shiny.—Adriane Quinlan, Curbed, 24 Jan. 2025 See all Example Sentences for populace
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Middle French, "mob, rabble," borrowed from Italian popolazzo, popolaccio "the common people, the masses, rabble, mob," from popolopeople entry 1 + -azzo, -accio, augmentative and pejorative suffix, going back to Latin -āceus-aceous
Note:
The extension of -āceus to nouns, through deletion of the modified head noun, takes place already in Latin (see note at -aceous), and continued into Italian—compare focaccia "flatbread," already attested in Late Latin, from Latin focus "hearth." At some point the notion of appurtenance or similarity appears to have led to that of devaluation, whence the application of the Italian suffix to things of inappropriately large size or inferior quality. The derivatives popolazzo and popolaccio show both the Tuscan outcome -accio and a variant -azzo that represents the outcome of -āceus in Upper Italian or southern Italian dialects.
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