different between saic vs sadic

saic

English

Alternative forms

  • saick (obsolete)

Etymology

From French saïque, from Italian saicca, from Ottoman Turkish ?????? (?ayka). Doublet of Czajka.

Noun

saic (plural saics)

  1. A kind of ketch heavily used in the Black Sea, Tisa, Danube and Sava

Anagrams

  • ACIs, ACSI, ASIC, CAIS, CAIs, CISA, ICAs, Saci, Sica, asci

saic From the web:

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sadic

English

Alternative forms

  • Sadic

Etymology

From the Marquis de Sade +? -ic, probably after French sadique.

Adjective

sadic (comparative more sadic, superlative most sadic)

  1. Sadistic.
    • 1925, Ford Madox Ford, No More Parades, Penguin 2012 (Parade's End), p. 349:
      Nothing but the infernal cruelty of their interview of the morning could have forced him to make a proposal of illicit intercourse to a young lady to whom hitherto he had spoken not even one word of affection. It was an effect of a Sadic kind.

Anagrams

  • ASDIC, acids, ascid, cadis, caids

Romanian

Etymology

From French sadique.

Adjective

sadic m or n (feminine singular sadic?, masculine plural sadici, feminine and neuter plural sadice)

  1. sadistic

Declension

sadic From the web:

  • sadic meaning
  • what does sadist mean
  • what does seditious mean
  • what does sadistic mean
  • what does sadico mean
  • what does sadica mean in spanish
  • what does sabic stand for
  • what does seditious
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