Idolaters is a plural noun referring to people who worship idols or who excessively admire someone or something. It denotes a belief or practice of idol worship or idolization, often used in religious or critical contexts. The term implies reverence beyond reason, sometimes carrying a negative or judgmental tone depending on usage.
US: rhotic /r/ may link in the final syllable; UK: non-rhotic tendency but with clear /r/ in linked speech before a vowel; AU: tends toward vowel-reduced final syllable with a slightly faster cadence. For all: maintain the /ˈleɪ/ as a distinct nucleus, keep the /t/ released, and avoid turning /tərz/ into /tər/. Use IPA guides to tune vowel quality and consonant release.
"The ancient temple was filled with idolaters who offered sacrifices to statues."
"Critics labeled the fan club as a group of idolaters for revering the pop star more than her music."
"In the debate, the speaker warned against blind idolaters of wealth and power."
"Scholars argued that idolaters in the text misconstrued the deity’s true nature."
Idolaters derives from Middle English idolater, ultimately from the Latin idolator, from idolum ‘image, idol’ + -ator denoting a person who performs a specified action. The root idol- traces to the Greek eidolon, meaning ‘image, idol’ through Latin idolare ‘to worship idols, adore.’ The suffix -er/-ator forms agentive nouns. The term first appears in religious and philosophical writings in the late medieval/early modern period, where debates about idolatry and reverence were central. Over time, its use broadened to describe excessive or uncritical admiration beyond religious contexts, sometimes applied to admirers of celebrities or leaders. In modern usage, idolater retains a connotation of religious or moral judgement, often signaling critique of unthinking devotion rather than mere admiration. The word’s severity can vary by context, from historical to literary to contemporary critical discourse, reflecting shifting attitudes toward reverence and belief.
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Words that rhyme with "Idolaters"
-ors sounds
-ers sounds
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Pronounce as /ˌaɪ.dəˈleɪ.tərz/ (US/UK alike). The primary stress is on the third syllable ‘LAY,’ with a secondary stress on the first syllable in careful speech: /ˌaɪ.dəˈleɪ.tərz/. Start with the long, darting /aɪ/ in ‘eye,’ then a schwa-ish /ə/ in the second syllable, followed by the stressed /eɪ/ in ‘lay.’ The final syllable is /tərz/ with a voiceless /t/ transitioning to a voiced /z/. Audio reference: you can hear variations in Pronounce or Forvo entries labeled Idolaters.
Common errors: 1) Misplacing stress, saying ‘i-DO-laters’ instead of ‘i-do-LAY-ters’; 2) Reducing the second syllable to a weak schwa leading to /ˌaɪ.dɪˈleɪ.tərz/; 3) Final -ers mispronounced as /-ər/ or /-ərz/ without linking to the preceding /t/. Correction: keep the /ˈleɪ/ strong, use a clear /t/ before the final /ərz/, and maintain the /z/ final; practice with minimal pairs like idol vs idolater and pluralize with a light /z/.
In US, most speakers have /ˌaɪ.dəˈleɪ.tərz/, with rhoticity affecting the linking in rapid speech. UK speakers often maintain the same phonemes but can have a shorter /ɜː/ in ‘ter’ and a slightly crisper /t/; the final /z/ can be very light. Australian accents usually preserve /ˌaɪ.dəˈleɪ.təz/ with a more centralized /ə/ in the final syllable and a subtly less rounded /eɪ/. Across all, stress pattern remains 1-2-3-4, primary stress on lay.
Difficulties include the three-syllable rhythm with a mid diphthong /eɪ/ in the third syllable and the final cluster /tərz/ that can blur in rapid speech. The position of secondary stress and the transition from a consonant cluster to a voiced sibilant /z/ requires precise timing. Additionally, the first syllable uses a clear /aɪ/ vowel that can be misarticulated if you tend to reduce vowels in multisyllabic words.
A unique angle: the word’s suffix -aters is often heard as /-əlers/ in fast speech, so you might hear ‘Ido-laters’ in casual speech. To avoid this, keep the /ˈleɪ/ intact and ensure the following /t/ is released before the /ərz/. Also watch for blending when followed by a vowel-starting word, using a light linking for /r/.
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