republic
noun
re·pub·lic
ri-ˈpə-blik
plural republics
1
a
: a government in which the power belongs to a body of citizens entitled to vote and is exercised by the leaders and representatives elected by those citizens to govern according to law
b
often Republic plural Republics
: a country, state, or territory having a republican (see republican entry 2 sense 2a) government
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands …—Francis Bellamy
The United States, which the eighteenth-century American elite sought to refashion as a new Roman Republic …—Michael Lind
also
: a usually specified government of such a country, state, or territory
the French Fourth Republic
c
: a country, state, or territory that is headed by someone other than a hereditary monarch but whose citizens do not hold real power
the former Soviet republics
Note: In modern times, this sense is used in the names of various countries whose forms of government vary greatly and include dictatorships and totalitarian regimes.
see also banana republic2
a
figurative
: a community of beings thought to resemble a political republic especially by exhibiting a general equality among members
… a curious republic of industrious hornets …—Michel-Guillaume-Saint-Jean de Crèvecoeur
b
: a group of people freely engaged in a specified activity
a republic of scholars
[Zora Neale] Hurston makes explicit two contradictory and submerged elements of that tradition: First, and most visibly, she restores funkiness and folk roots to black women's discourse; second, and no less important, she dares to articulate black women's craving for independent recognition in the republic of letters. [=the people who read and write literature]—Elizabeth Fox-Genovese
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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