dialectician

English

Alternative forms

  • dialecticiane, dialectisiane, dialectitian (obsolete)

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˌdʌɪəlɛkˈtɪʃn/
  • (US) IPA(key): /ˌdaɪəlɛkˈtɪʃn/, /ˌdaɪəlɛkˈtɪʃən/

Etymology 1

From French dialecticien (one skillful in dialectic), from Latin dialecticus (dialectic) + French -ien (-ian) from Latin -ianus (-ian). Equivalent to dialectic + -ian.

Noun

dialectician (plural dialecticians)

  1. (chiefly historical) Someone skilled in dialectics: someone able to arrive at logical conclusions through reasoned argument. [1560]
  2. (Hegelianism) Someone skilled in dialectical idealism: someone able to arrive at historical conclusions through consideration of contradictions. [1871]
  3. (Marxism) Someone skilled in dialectical materialism: someone able to arrive at socio-political conclusions through consideration of class differences.
Hypernyms

Etymology 2

From dialectic (dialectical) + -ian.

Noun

dialectician (plural dialecticians)

  1. Someone knowledgable about dialects. [1848]
Synonyms
Hypernyms

References

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