Social instability caused by erosion of standards and values.
Alienation and purposelessness experienced by a person or a class as a result of a lack of standards, values, or ideals: "We must now brace ourselves for disquisitions on peer pressure, adolescent anomie and rage"(Charles Krauthammer).
[French, from Greek anomiā, lawlessness, from anomos, lawless : a-, without; see a-1 + nomos, law; see nem- in Indo-European roots.] a·nom'ic (ə-nŏm'ĭk, ə-nō'mĭk) adj.
1591, anomy, "disregard of law," from Gk. a- "without" + nomos "law" (see numismatics). The modern use, with Fr. spelling (from Durkheim's "Suicide," 1897), is first attested 1933 and means "absence of accepted social values."
Main Entry: ano·mic Pronunciation: &-'näm-ik, A-, -'nO-mik Function: adjective : relating to or characterized by anomie
Main Entry: an·o·mie Variant: alsoan·o·my/'an-&-mE/ Function: noun : social instability resulting from abreakdown of standards and values; also: personal unrest, alienation, and anxiety that comes from a lack of purpose or ideals