[f. as prec. + -ISM.] Squiredom.

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1819.  W. S. Rose, Lett., I. 97. A trait of genuine squirism in the life of Obizzo.

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1843.  J. Sterling, in Carlyle, Life (1851), II. xiii. 327. Squirism had already, in that day, become the caput mortuum that it is now.

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