charisma

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A gift or power of leadership or authority.
  2. The capacity to inspire devotion or enthusiasm; personal charm.
  3. A gift or power bestowed upon a person by the Holy Spirit; a grace.
name
  1. A female given name from Ancient Greek.

Pronunciation

/kəˈɹɪzmə/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Wodencafe-charisma.wav LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vininn126-charisma.wav

Word forms

charisma charismas charismata

Etymology

From Ancient Greek χᾰ́ρῐσμᾰ (khắrĭsmă, “grace, favour, gift”), from χᾰρῐ́ζομαι (khărĭ́zomai, “to show favor”), from χᾰ́ρῐς (khắrĭs, “grace”), from the same root χαρ- (khar-) as χαίρω (khaírō, “to be happy”). Doublet of charism. First attested in 1875. Outside of theology, as early as 1930, charisma was found in a translation of a book written by German sociologist Max Weber, which OED and Etymonline regards as a semantic loan from German Charisma, denoting the special ability of certain leaders to inspire devotion (sense 1). By the 1940s and more clearly in the 1950s, the term was used more loosely to refer to personal charm in general (sense 1.1).

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