different between polysyllabism vs polysyllabicism

polysyllabism

English

Noun

polysyllabism (usually uncountable, plural polysyllabisms)

  1. (linguistics) The state or characteristic of having or using words containing multiple syllables, sometimes as a stage in the development of language.
    • 1936, Martin Joos, "Book Review: The Psycho-Biology of Language by George K. Zipf," Language, vol. 12, no. 3 (July/Sep), p. 202,
      Chinese polysyllabism is a sort of synthesis, or aggregation, or 'addition' of morphemes and their meanings.
  2. Polysyllabicism.
    • 1867, William Dwight Whitney, Language and the Study of Language, Scribner, New York, p. 348,
      Cumbrous compounds are formed as the names of objects and a character of tedious and time-wasting polysyllabism is given to the language.

Related terms

  • polysyllabic
  • polysyllabicity
  • polysyllable

References

  • “polysyllabism” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  • Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.

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polysyllabicism

English

Etymology

polysyllabic +? -ism

Noun

polysyllabicism (usually uncountable, plural polysyllabicisms)

  1. (of linguistic expression) The state or characteristic of having a polysyllabic or overly complex style.
    • 1807, W. Taylor, Annual Review, p. 274:
      It will only facilitate the acquirement of a sesquipedalian diction, having the polysyllabicism without the precision of Johnson.
    • 1973, C. G. Dobbs, "Book Review of Soil Micro-Organisms by T. R. G. Gray and S. T. Williams (1971)," The Journal of Applied Ecology, vol. 10, no. 2, p. 665:
      If polysyllabicism is considered more 'scientific,' should we not seize the opportunity to call the study of micro-organisms 'mico-organicology'?
    • 2005 Feb. 15, Susan Elkin, In praise of polysyllabicism, Telegraph.co.uk, Telegraph Media Group:
      Vocabulary is the meat, blood and bones of language.

Related terms

  • polysyllable
  • polysyllabicity
  • polysyllabism

References

  • “polysyllabicism” in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  • Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed., 1989.

polysyllabicism From the web:

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