- ETIC
- Environmental Teratology Information Center
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
etic — ÉTIC adj. v. moral. (O comportare etic.) Trimis de siveco, 13.09.2007. Sursa: Sinonime étic adj. m., pl. étici; f. sg. étică, pl. étice Tri … Dicționar Român
ETIC — est une marque collective déposée dans le cadre de la Charte eTIC, Charte déontologique régissant les relations entre un fournisseur de produits, services et conseils en TIC et son client professionnel. Catégorie : Marque … Wikipédia en Français
-etic — combining element meaning pertaining to, from Gk. etikos, adjectival suffix for nouns ending in esis … Etymology dictionary
etic — 1954, coined by K.L. Pike from ending of PHONETIC (Cf. phonetic) … Etymology dictionary
etic — adjective Of or pertaining to analysis of a culture from the perspective on one who is not a participant in that culture. A useful example of the emic etic distinction may be made by comparing the concept “waves on the ocean or sea” from the… … Wiktionary
etic — /ˈɛtɪk/ (say etik) adjective being an item of raw data of a language or other behavioural system. Compare emic. {from (phon)etic; see emic} …
etic — ˈed.ik adjective Etymology: phonetic : of, relating to, or having linguistic or behavioral characteristics considered without regard to their structural significance a sound spectrogram is a good example of etic description John Algeo compare… … Useful english dictionary
ETIC — estimated time for completion; estimated time in commission … Military dictionary
etic — adjective Etymology: phonetic Date: 1954 of, relating to, or involving analysis of cultural phenomena from the perspective of one who does not participate in the culture being studied compare emic … New Collegiate Dictionary
-etic — adjective suffix Etymology: Latin & Greek; Latin eticus, from Greek etikos, ētikos, from etos, ētos, ending of certain verbals ic < limnetic > often in adjectives corresponding to nouns ending in esis < genetic > … New Collegiate Dictionary
etic — /et ik/, adj. Ling. pertaining to or being the raw data of a language or other area of behavior, without considering the data as significant units functioning within a system. Cf. emic. [1950 55; extracted from PHONETIC; see EMIC] * * * … Universalium