What is another word for hermits?

Pronunciation: [hˈɜːmɪts] (IPA)

Hermits are individuals who live in seclusion and isolation from the rest of society. Other words commonly used to describe such people include recluses, loners, and solitary individuals. People who shun social interaction may also be referred to as anchorites, ascetics, monks, or eremites. Furthermore, certain related terms denote people who live alone or in remote areas, such as frontier settlers, homesteaders, and wilderness dwellers. In addition, other words used to describe seclusion seekers may include introverts, individualists, secluded individuals, self-sufficient people, and self-reliant individuals.

What are the hypernyms for Hermits?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Hermits

But The Retreat was a retreat, and smelt strong of the hermits, who were cats.
"Somehow Good"
William de Morgan
"The inhabitants of the country can distinguish each species of bird by listening to his song; and the hermits, the wanderers, those who live with society on a perpetual war footing, perceive sounds which would not strike the ears of civilized people.
"Common Sense Subtitle: How To Exercise It"
Yoritomo-Tashi
"I told you that we hermits were dreamers," answered McCalloway.
"The Tempering"
Charles Neville Buck

Famous quotes with Hermits

  • New York has more hermits than will be found in all the forests, mountains and deserts of the United States.
    Simeon Strunsky
  • But I'll tell you what hermits realize. If you go off into a far, far forest and get very quiet, you'll come to understand that you're connected with everything.
    Alan Watts
  • the universal family can never be built by hermits. Contact may lead to contamination, but it is essential to redemption. Love never flees from the object of its affection. Where pain is most severe and sorrow most bitter, there love is most solicitous and untiring.
    Kirby Page
  • A state of princes; a skulk of friars; a skulk of thieves; an observance of hermits; a lying of pardoners; a subtiltie of serjeants; an untruth of sompners; a multiplying of husbands; an incredibility of cuckolds; a safeguard of porters; a stalk of foresters; a blast of hunters; a draught of butlers; a temperance of cooks; a melody of harpers; a poverty of pipers; a drunkenship of coblers; a disguising of taylors; a wandering of tinkers; a malepertness of pedlars; a fighting of beggars; a rayful, (that is, a netful) of knaves; a blush of boys; a bevy of ladies; a nonpatience of wives; a gagle of women; a gagle of geese; a superfluity of nuns; and a herd of harlots. Similar terms were applied to inanimate things, as a caste of bread, a cluster of grapes, a cluster of nuts, &c.
    Joseph Strutt
  • Valmiki stood up and broke free out of that hard anthill. Suddenly he saw all around him many houses of hermits and their families, young trees carefully watered, a retreat cleared from the forest. Four boys ran up to him from the river and cried "The wife of some great warrior weeps by Ganges. She is fair as a Goddess fallen from heaven, all bewildered, all alone, never seen before, with child, and with small gifts tied from the city within a silk cloth beside her. Go to her, welcome her and protect her.
    Valmiki

Related words: hermit crabs, hermit crab habitat, hermit crabs habitat, hermit animal, do hermit crabs have shells, what animals live alone, do hermit crabs need shells

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