11. A person who adheres to the idea of cosmopolitanism in any of its forms is called a cosmopolitan or cosmopolite . 12. The variety of subjects he wrote about represented the wide range of topics in which a cosmopolite might reasonably take an interest. 13. This pattern can seem, at first glance, like the ancient distinction throughout the world between liberal cosmopolites and traditionalist farmers. 14. E�a, a cosmopolite widely read in English literature, was not enamoured of English society, but he was fascinated by its oddity. 15. Unlike many other oreodonts, who were restricted to certain habitats and places, " Mesoreodon " seemed to have been a cosmopolite . 16. The big promotional displays in record stores are for the long-dead cosmopolite Maria Callas, not for the vital young Roman Ms . Bartoli. 17. These predatory histerid beetles have been introduced in some countries for the control of the Banana Weevil borer ( " Cosmopolites sordidus " ). 18. Catering to the impatient cosmopolite or nerd was the whole point of starting Greenberg's half of the store, the side with the antiquarian books. 19. I am now an Australasian and I suppose a cosmopolite . . . . Yet I languish for my old home,'Yr Hen Wlad . '" 20. With no insult intended to that fair city, it seems an out-of-the-way place for this ultimate musical cosmopolite to take his leave.