patronize

patronize
I
(New American Roget's College Thesaurus)
v. t. support, endorse, aid; deal or do business with; buy from, frequent, go to, shop at; look down upon, show contempt or condescension, condescend toward. See humility, aid, barter.
II
(Roget's IV) v.
1. [To trade with]
Syn. habituate, buy from, purchase from, shop with; see buy 1 , sell 1 .
2. [To assume a condescending attitude]
Syn. talk down to, be overbearing, stoop, be gracious to, indulge, favor, pat on the back, play the snob, snub, lord it over; see also condescend .
III
(Roget's 3 Superthesaurus)
I
v.
do business with, buy at, deal with, trade at, frequent, shop at.
II
(VOCABULARY WORD) v.
[PAY truh nize]
to talk down to as an inferior; to condescend.
He always patronizes those without college degrees.
SYN.: *talk down to, talk to as an inferior, indulge, condescend, regard loftily, *look down one's nose at, regard superciliously, humor, suffer, endure.
ANT.: look up to, flatter, *kiss up to, *brownnose
IV
(Roget's Thesaurus II) verb 1. To act as a patron to: sponsor, support. See HELP. 2. To treat in a superciliously indulgent manner: condescend. Informal: high-hat. Idiom: speak (or talk) down to. See ATTITUDE, OVER, RESPECT, RISE.

English dictionary for students. 2013.

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  • patronize — pat‧ron‧ize [ˈpætrənaɪz ǁ ˈpeɪ , ˈpæ ] also patronise verb [transitive] 1. COMMERCE to use or visit a particular shop, restaurant, hotel etc: • Many homosexuals patronize gay owned companies simply because they feel more comfortable there …   Financial and business terms

  • patronize — [v1] condescend be gracious to, be lofty, be overbearing, deign, favor, indulge, look down on*, pat on the back*, snub, stoop, talk down to*, toss a few crumbs*, treat as inferior, treat badly, treat like a child*; concept 384 Ant. be humble, be… …   New thesaurus

  • Patronize — Pa tron*ize, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Patronized}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Patronizing}.] 1. To act as patron toward; to support; to countenance; to favor; to aid. [1913 Webster] The idea has been patronized by two States only. A. Hamilton. [1913 Webster] 2 …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • patronize — I (condescend toward) verb assume a lofty bearing, deign, favor, grant, indulge, look down on, lower oneself, oblige, talk down to, treat in a condescending way, vouchsafe II (trade with) verb be a customer of, buy from, deal with, do business… …   Law dictionary

  • patronize — (v.) 1580s, to act as a patron towards, from PATRON (Cf. patron) + IZE (Cf. ize). Meaning treat in a condescending way is first attested 1797; sense of give regular business to is from 1801. Related: Patronized; patronizing …   Etymology dictionary

  • patronize — (Amer.) pa·tron·ize || peɪtrÉ™naɪz / pæt v. be arrogant, behave in a condescending manner; serve as a sponsor, serve as a benefactor; be a regular customer at a store or other business (also patronise) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • patronize — (also patronise) ► VERB 1) treat condescendingly. 2) be a patron of …   English terms dictionary

  • patronize — [pā′trə nīz΄, pa′trən īz΄] vt. patronized, patronizing 1. to act as a patron toward; sponsor; support 2. to be kind or helpful to, but in a haughty or snobbish way, as if dealing with an inferior 3. to be a regular customer of (a store, merchant …   English World dictionary

  • patronize — [[t]pæ̱trənaɪz, AM pe͟ɪt [/t]] patronizes, patronizing, patronized (in BRIT, also use patronise) 1) VERB (disapproval) If someone patronizes you, they speak or behave towards you in a way which seems friendly, but which shows that they think they …   English dictionary

  • patronize — verb (T) 1 to talk to someone as if they are stupid when in fact they are not: Don t patronize me I m not a fool. 2 formal to use or visit a shop, restaurant etc: tourists who patronize the shopping and recreational facilities 3 to support or… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • patronize — UK [ˈpætrənaɪz] / US [ˈpeɪtrənaɪz] verb Word forms patronize : present tense I/you/we/they patronize he/she/it patronizes present participle patronizing past tense patronized past participle patronized 1) [intransitive/transitive] showing… …   English dictionary

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