Is there a word for a person who is interested in many things? (Not dilettante)
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Could you use Renaissance to describe the person? Dilettante, a slur, says dabbling, whereas Renaissance says accomplished. – Yosef Baskin May 25 '17 at 20:39
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1What kind of things? – Cascabel_StandWithUkraine_ May 25 '17 at 21:04
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I voted to close due to lack of research could also have marked as a duplicate of https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/358065/student-of-many-disciplines-without-the-negative-connotation-of-dilettante or many others – k1eran May 25 '17 at 22:21
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You're going to need to be more specific about the word you want. Please refer to the checklist in the tag info. – Andrew Leach May 25 '17 at 23:12
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polymath "a person of wide-ranging knowledge or learning."
or, from the Wikipedia article, " a person whose expertise spans a significant number of different subject areas"
Roger Sinasohn
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WhatRoughBeast
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Hmmm...expertise does not equate with interest necessarily, does it? – thomj1332 May 25 '17 at 21:09
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@thomj1332 - Well, it's hard to become expert without interest. – WhatRoughBeast May 25 '17 at 22:23
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What comes to mind first is renaissance man:
Renaissance man
(also Renaissance woman)NOUN
A person with many talents or areas of knowledge.
But there's also polymath which is pretty much spot on:
NOUN
A person of wide knowledge or learning.
‘a Renaissance polymath’
Roger Sinasohn
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I have heard the the term 'Da Vinci' used to describe someone who has a wide range of interests and is astute in his pursuit of these - "John is somewhat of a Da Vinci, he loves science, art and mechanics."
flamesquirrel
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Worldling according to M-W means:
a person engrossed in the concerns of this present world
thomj1332
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"Worldling" has the negative connotation that the person concerns himself with worldly, mundane things. It does not say that the person has a wide range interests. – Jonas May 26 '17 at 09:33