endite

/ˈɛndaɪt/

Definitions

1. noun

A writer or poet of the late 16th century, especially a member of a group of English writers who sought to restore the language to its classical purity, as exemplified by the works of Sir Philip Sidney and Edmund Spenser.

“The 16th-century endites sought to revive the poetic style of the ancient Greeks.”

Synonyms

  • bard
  • poet

Antonyms

  • non-poetic writer
  • prose writer