different between eclectic vs motley

eclectic

English

Alternative forms

  • eclectick (obsolete)

Etymology

From French éclectique, from Ancient Greek ?????????? (eklektikós, selective), from ?????? (eklég?, I pick, choose), from ?? (ek, out, from) + ???? (lég?, I choose, count).

Cognate to elect

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?k?l?k.t?k/, /??kl?k.t?k/
  • Rhymes: -?kt?k

Adjective

eclectic (comparative more eclectic, superlative most eclectic)

  1. Selecting a mixture of what appears to be best of various doctrines, methods or styles.
    • 1893, John Robson, Hinduism and its Relations to Christianity, page 211, 214
      Chunder Sen and the Progressive Brahmists broke entirely with Hinduism...and he selected from the scriptures of all creeds what seemed best in them for instruction and for worship. [] It is an eclectic religion: it seeks to select what is good from all religions, and it has become the latest evidence that no eclectic religion can ever influence large numbers of men.
  2. Unrelated and unspecialized; heterogeneous.

Synonyms

  • (unrelated and unspecialized): heterogeneous; see also Thesaurus:heterogeneous

Antonyms

  • (selecting a mixture of doctrines): exclusive, homogeneous, orthodox, standard, uniform; see also Thesaurus:homogeneous

Derived terms

  • eclectically
  • eclecticism

Translations

See also

  • cherry pick
  • heteroclite
  • holistic

Noun

eclectic (plural eclectics)

  1. Someone who selects according to the eclectic method.

Translations


Romanian

Etymology

From French éclectique

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /e?klek.tik/

Adjective

eclectic m or n (feminine singular eclectic?, masculine plural eclectici, feminine and neuter plural eclectice)

  1. eclectic

Declension

eclectic From the web:

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motley

English

Etymology

From Middle English motle, from Anglo-Norman motteley (parti-colored), late 14th c., from Old English mot (speck), cognate with mote.

Equivalent to mottle +? -y

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?m?tli/

Adjective

motley (comparative more motley or motlier, superlative most motley or motliest)

  1. Comprising greatly varied elements, to the point of incongruity.
    Synonyms: heterogeneous, diverse, manifold; see also Thesaurus:heterogeneous
  2. Having many colours; variegated.
    Synonyms: colorful, prismatic, variegated; see also Thesaurus:multicolored

Derived terms

  • motley crew

Translations

Noun

motley (plural motleys)

  1. An incongruous mixture.
  2. A jester's multicoloured clothes.
  3. (by extension) A jester; a fool.

Translations

Anagrams

  • etymol.

motley From the web:

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  • what motley crue looks like now
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  • what motley crue album was john corabi
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