different between etic vs metic
etic
English
Etymology
Coined by American linguist Kenneth Pike in 1954 from phonetic.
- 1962, Kenneth Lee Pike, With Heart and Mind: A Personal Synthesis of Scholarship and Devotion, page 37
- I have coined the term etic to refer to the detached observer’s view […]
Adjective
etic (comparative more etic, superlative most etic)
- (social sciences) Of or pertaining to analysis of a culture from a perspective situated outside all cultures.
- 1996, Advanced Methodological Issues in Culturally Competent Evaluation for Substance Abuse Prevention
- A useful example of the emic-etic distinction may be made by comparing the concept “waves on the ocean or sea” from the perspective of a European American with that of a Truk Islander […] The proposed etics here might be that both cultures understand the use of waves as vehicles for surfing and as movement reflecting the transfer of energy […] certain differences, or emics exist, for European Americans the waves may be sources of beauty — the Truk Islander has learned to use them […] as a road map.
- 1996, Advanced Methodological Issues in Culturally Competent Evaluation for Substance Abuse Prevention
Coordinate terms
- emic
Derived terms
- etically
Translations
Anagrams
- CETI, EITC, Tice, cite, tice
Classical Nahuatl
Etymology
From Proto-Uto-Aztecan. Cognate with Hopi putu (“heavy”) and O'odham we:c.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /eti?k/
Adjective
etic
- heavy
References
- Andrews, J. Richard. (2003) Workbook for Introduction to Classical Nahuatl, Revised Edition, University of Oklahoma Press, page 208.
- Karttunen, Frances. (1983) An Analytical Dictionary of Nahuatl, University of Texas Press, page 10.
- Lockhart, James. (2001) Nahuatl as Written, Stanford University Press, page 210.
Romanian
Etymology
From French éthique, from Latin ethicus.
Adjective
etic m or n (feminine singular etic?, masculine plural etici, feminine and neuter plural etice)
- ethic
Declension
etic From the web:
- what etic means
- what's etica mean
- what does erica mean
- what does ethical mean
- what is etic perspective
- what is etic and emic
- what does etic stand for
- what does e ticket mean
metic
English
Etymology
From Late Latin metycus (also metoecus), from Ancient Greek ???????? (métoikos, “foreigner, metic”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?m?t?k/
- (General American, weak vowel merger) IPA(key): /?m?t?k/, [?m???k]
- (intervocalic alveolar flapping) Homophone: medic
- Rhymes: -?t?k
Noun
metic (plural metics)
- (historical) In Ancient Greek city-states, a resident alien who did not have the rights of a citizen and who paid a tax for the right to live there.
Translations
Further reading
metic on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
metic From the web:
- what meticulous mean
- what metric
- what metric-dimension combination is not valid
- what metric prefix is the largest
- what metrics are used to measure performance
- what metric shows how closely
- what metrics are used to measure success
- what metrics does whoop measure
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