sb. and a. [f. ANTIPOD-ES + -IST.] A. sb. A believer in the antipodes (at a time when the belief was heresy).
1866. De Morgan, in Athenæum, 21 April, 532/2. Some have maintained that the antipodist was a different person from the canonized bishop.
B. adj. = ANTIPODAL.
1844. Mozley, Arnold, in Ess. (1878), II. 52. A system like his was bound to thrust out such an antipodist one.