| demo-, dem-, demio-, -demic, -deme, -demically (Greek: people).From district, country, land, and the people who inhabit those territories.demagogue, demagog, demagogical: 1. A political leader who gains power by apealing to people's emotions and prejudices rather than their rationality.  2. In ancient times, a popular leader who represented the ordinay people. demagoguery: The character, behavior, tactics, or rhetoric of a demagogue.
 democracy: 1. The free and equal right of every person to participae in a system of government, often practiced by electing representatives of the people by the people.  2. A country with a government that has been elected freely and equally by all its citizens. 3. The control of an organization by its members, who have a free and equal right to participate in decision-making processes. democrat: Someone who believes in democracy and the democratic system of government and argues in favor of them.
 democratic, democratically: Characterized by free and equal participation in government or in the decision-making processes of an organization or group.
 democratize, democratized, democratization, democratizing: 1. To put a country under the control of its citizens by allowing hem to participate in a government of decision-making processes in a free and equal way.  2. To take steps toward establishing the features of liberal democracy in a state. 3. To put an organization under the control of its members by giving them free and equal decision-making powers. demographer: Someone who studies human populations, including their size, growth, density, and distribution, and statistics regarding birth, marriage, disease, and death.
 demographic, demographically: Relating to demography or demographics.
 demographics: The characteristics of a human population or part of it; especially its size, growth, density, distribution, and statistics regarding birth, marriage, disease, and death (requires a plural verb).
 demography: The study of human populations, including their size, growth, density, and distribution; as well as, statistics regarding birth, marriage, disease, and death.
 demomania: The apparent excessive attachment to the "common people".
 demomaniac: Someone who is perceived to have an excessive  attachment to the "common people".
 demophil: Having a fondness or love of people; a friend of the people.
 demophile: A person who has a fondness for people.
 demophilia: Having a special interest in the lives  and habits of the masses.
 demotic: 1. Relating to or involving ordinary people.  2. Relating to a simplified form of hieroglyphics, the writing system used in ancient Egypt. Literally, "of the people". endemic: 1. Used to describe a disease occurring within a specific area, region, or locale.  2. Characteristic of a particular place or among a particular group or area of interest or activity. Literally, "in the people". epidemic, epidemical: An outbreak of a disease that spreads more quickly and more extensively among a group of people than would normally be expected.
 epidemicity: The quality of being epidemic.
 epidemiography: A treatise upon, or history of, epidemic diseases.
 epidemiologist: A specialist in the medical study of causes and transmissions of diseases among people.
 epidemiology: 1. The scientific and medical study of the causes and transmission of disease within a population.  2. The origin and development characteristics of a particular disease. pandemia: Of or belonging to the whole people, public, general.
 pandemic: 1. General, universal; especially, of a disease.  2. Prevalent over the whole of a country or continent, or over the whole world. Distinguished from epidemic, which may connote limitation to a smaller area. 3. plutodemocracy: 1. Plutocratic government which masquerades as democracy.  2. A country or state that purports to be a democracy but where power lies with the rich. theodemocracy: A democracy under divine, or religious, rule.
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