monotonist

noun 4adj 1

Definitions

noun

1

One who talks in the same strain or on the same subject until weariness is produced.

If I ruin such a virtue, sayest thou!—Eternal monotonist!—Again; the most immaculate virtue may be ruined by men who have no regard to their honour, and who make a jest of the most solemn oaths, &c. What must be the virtue that will be ruined without oaths?

and those who will be honest enough will own, as I imagine, the Homer has few beauties; his slumbers long and fequent, and notwithstanding his fifteen hundred commentators and translators, he is a monotonist, verbose, and a surfeiting describer.

2

One whose work is monochromatic or characterized by sameness.

If read with propriety, it will soon correct the monotonist of that sameness of tone, which so disgusts in most common readers, and with which no person can ever reasonably expect to give pleasure to those who are so unfortunate as to be his hearers ,

I could chide thee now As vexed Apollo some monotonist That will but finger in one mode alone, And learn no other.

3

A woman who is focussed solely on her role as wife and mother; a tradwife.

I don't wish to run my head up against a stone wall. I mean to turn into a British 'monotonist;' and after Parliament meets I can go up to London.

No dying in debt at home in a bed that would wind up in a high-tourist attraction, just because one was a monotonist didn't mean everything always had to be The Same, The Same, The Same...

4

One who believes a corporation should care only about maximizing shareholder value, and not be concerned with any other stakeholders.

The monotonist perspective maintains that the purpose of the corporation is the legal, short-term maximization of shareholder wealth (Friedman 2002). From the monotonist perspective, responsible corporate board governance requires that board members eschew any extra-shareholder considerations in decision making as reflecting inappropriate social political or cultural influences, possible violations of innate property rights, or even subterfuges that would allow top managers to act in furtherance of their own interests to the detriment of aggregate investor interests.

Private benefit corporations (as opposed to B corporations — public benefit corporations) under the monotonist rubric have secured investor wealth but also have injured many stakeholders through the abusive use of power from the unlimited accumulation of financial assets without legal liability (Korten 2010; Turnbull 2002).

adj

1

Characterized by sameness; unvarying; lacking originality.

Egyptian architecture consequently was cold, monotonist, and insipid.

I will say nothing more until I have heard your renditions, which are certain to lack emotion and be monotonist.

Your note

not saved
0 chars