different between aporia vs aporetical

aporia

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin aporia, from Ancient Greek ?????? (aporía), from ?????? (áporos, impassable), from ?- (a-, a-) + ????? (póros, passage).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /??p?????/

Noun

aporia (plural aporias)

  1. (rhetoric) An expression of deliberation with oneself regarding uncertainty or doubt as to how to proceed.
    • 2012, Andy Martin, ‘Text Messenger’, Literary Review 404:
      Meanings are superposed in an aporia – not ‘either/or’, but ‘and/and’.
  2. (philosophy, post-structuralism) An insoluble contradiction in a text's meaning; a logical impasse suggested by a text or speaker.
    Synonyms: impasse, paradox, contradiction

Translations

Further reading

  • Aporia on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Finnish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??pori?/, [??po??ri?]
  • Rhymes: -i?
  • Syllabification: a?po?ri?a

Noun

aporia

  1. aporia

Declension


Italian

Etymology

Ancient Greek

Noun

aporia f (plural aporie)

  1. aporia

Anagrams

  • rapaio

Portuguese

Verb

aporia

  1. first-person singular conditional of apor
  2. third-person singular conditional of apor

aporia From the web:

  • what aporia mean
  • aporia what does it mean
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aporetical

English

Adjective

aporetical (comparative more aporetical, superlative most aporetical)

  1. Tending to doubt.

Related terms

  • aporia

Translations

Anagrams

  • operatical

aporetical From the web:

  • what does apolitical mean
  • what do aporetic meaning
  • what is aporetic meaning
  • what is apolitical
  • what does apolitical mean in politics
  • is it good to be apolitical
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