different between dates vs proleptic

dates

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /de?ts/

Noun

dates

  1. plural of date

Verb

dates

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of date

Anagrams

  • AEDST, Deats, Stade, Stead, TASed, asdet, desat, sadet, sated, stade, stead, tased, tsade

Catalan

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /?da.t?s/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /?da.tes/

Noun

dates

  1. plural of data

Danish

Noun

dates

  1. indefinite plural of date
  2. indefinite genitive singular of date

Verb

dates

  1. inflection of date:
    1. infinitive passive
    2. present passive

Dutch

Noun

dates

  1. plural of date

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dat/
  • Homophones: date, datent

Verb

dates

  1. second-person singular present indicative/subjunctive of dater

Anagrams

  • stade

Ladin

Noun

dates

  1. plural of data

Portuguese

Verb

dates

  1. second-person singular (tu) present subjunctive of datar
  2. second-person singular (tu, sometimes used with você) negative imperative of datar

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?dates/, [?d?a.t?es]

Verb

dates

  1. Informal second-person singular () negative imperative form of datar.
  2. Informal second-person singular () present subjunctive form of datar.

dates From the web:

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proleptic

English

Etymology

prolepsis +? -ic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /p?o??l?pt?k/

Adjective

proleptic (comparative more proleptic, superlative most proleptic)

  1. Of a calendar, extrapolated to dates prior to its first adoption; of those used to adjust to or from the Julian calendar or Gregorian calendar.
  2. Of an event, assigned a date that is too early.
  3. (rhetoric) Anticipating and answering objections before they have been raised; procataleptic.

Quotations

  • 1877, W. B. Pope., A Compendium of Christian Theology, Volume 2, Wesleyan Conference Office, 2 Castle Street, Coty Road; Sold at 66, Paternoster Row, p. 348:
    It must be always remembered that this was the object for which the Three Chapters which the Predestinarians have taken refuge in: they were written in fact as a proleptical refutation of such views.
  • 1925, John Dewey. Experience and Nature In The Later Works of John Dewey, Vol. 1, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale (IL), p. 150:
    When we name an event, calling it fire, we speak proleptically; we do not name an immediate event; that is impossible. We employ a term of discourse; we invoke a meaning, namely, the potential consequence of the existence.
  • 1989, W. Paul Jones. Theological Worlds Abingdon Press, Nashville, p. 151:
    In World Two, Jesus can be seen as the proleptic event, giving promise of God's vindication of creation in and through history.

Synonyms

  • (Anticipating and answering objections): anticipatory

Derived terms

  • proleptically

Translations


Romanian

Etymology

From French proleptique

Adjective

proleptic m or n (feminine singular proleptic?, masculine plural proleptici, feminine and neuter plural proleptice)

  1. proleptic

Declension

proleptic From the web:

  • what's proleptic irony
  • proleptic meaning
  • what does proleptic mean in the bible
  • what does proleptic irony mean
  • what is proleptic teaching
  • what is proleptic calendar
  • what does proleptic mean in english
  • what does proleptic mean in literature
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