epitome
\ ih-PIT-uh-mee \ , noun;1.
a person or thing that is typical of or possesses to a high degree the features of a whole class: He isthe epitome of goodness.
2.
a condensed account, especially of a literary work; abstract.
Quotes:
He used to say, the school itself initiated him a greatway (I remember that was his very expression); forgreat schools are little societies, where a boy of anyobservation may see in epitome what he willafterwards find in the world at large.
-- Henry Fielding, The Adventures of Joseph Andrews, 1742
But far beyond all other creatures of the herd is thegoat, the epitome of all that in an animal is worthliving for; full of frolic when a baby, and knowingnothing but to jump off small eminences, and to crymamma; conceited and pugnacious in youth; and inmaturity solemn to a degree that is at timesexasperating.
-- Oswald Parry, Six Months in a Syrian Monastery ,1895
Origin:
Epitome came to English in the 1500s from the Greek meaning "abridgment" or "surface incision."
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