dictionaric

发音

UK /ˈdɪkʃənˌɛɹɪk/
UK /ˈdɪkʃənˌæɹɪk/

词形变化

more dictionaric 比较级 most dictionaric 最高级

释义与例句

adj.
  1. 1.

    Of or pertaining to a dictionary; of a type or style commonly found in a dictionary.

    罕用

    1902, Alexander Hubert Providence Leuf, Gynecology, Obstetrics, Menopause: Being a Revised and Enlarged Reissue of Three Serial Articles Appearing in "The Medical Council", The Medical Council, page v, I have always held that a book should contain that which is characteristic of its author. Most of our books are dictionaric or encyclopedic ; many are faintly altered duplicates of those which preceded them.

    1983, Bohdan S. Wynar (ed.), American Reference Books Annual, Libraries Unlimited, volume 14, page 719, Although touted as an encyclopedia, the BASIC Handbook is instead dictionaric; there are no lengthy explanations of programming theory or “tricks of the trade,” but this is a complete, readable, and usable reference to the BASIC language.

    1995, Anesa Millaer-Pogacar (tr.), Mikhail Ėpshteĭn (auth.), After the Future: The Paradoxes of Postmodernism and Contemporary Russian Culture, University of Massachusetts Press, →ISBN, page 37, If contemporary literature is becoming increasingly “dictionaric” (not scientifically, but creatively dictionaric), then this has been conditioned by the laws of development of literature itself, which is entering upon the phase of self-description, self-interpretation.

词源

From dictionary + -ic. By surface analysis, diction + -aric.

来源:wiktionary