[f. prec. + -DOM; cf. Christendom.] The Anglo-Saxon domain or community; the collective body of Anglo-Saxons, the Anglo-Saxon race viewed as a whole; a rhetorical phrase for Great Britain and the United States.

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1850.  Lyell, Lett., in Life, II. 168. A regard for the sacredness of truth is not a rare exception to the rule in Anglo-Saxondom at least.

2

1872.  Daily News, 25 March, 5/5. Anglo-Saxondom is to have a wrangle royal at Geneva.

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1881.  Brewer, Eng. Stud., 63. For the strictly orthodox spelling of Cuthberht he gives Cuthbert, not known in Anglo-Saxondom.

4