different between hematic vs rhematic

hematic

English

Alternative forms

  • haematic

Etymology

Ancient Greek [Term?]

Adjective

hematic (not comparable)

  1. Of, pertaining to, affecting or containing blood

Translations

Noun

hematic (plural hematics)

  1. hematinic

Further reading

  • hematic at OneLook Dictionary Search
  • hematic, haematic at Google Ngram Viewer

Romanian

Etymology

From French hématique

Adjective

hematic m or n (feminine singular hematic?, masculine plural hematici, feminine and neuter plural hematice)

  1. hematic

Declension

hematic From the web:

  • what thematic means
  • what does thematic mean
  • what are hematic cells
  • what is hematic biometrics
  • what do hematic grenades do
  • thematic analysis
  • what does hematocrit measure
  • what is hematocrit


rhematic

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ????????? (rh?matikós, verbal, pertaining to verbs), from Ancient Greek ?????- (rh?mat-), ???? (rhêma, verb (grammar), word) + -???? (-ikós, -ic; suffix meaning ‘of or pertaining to, in the manner of’).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?i??mat?k/, /??-/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /???mæt?k/, /?i-/, /-?mæ??k/
  • Hyphenation: rhe?ma?tic

Noun

rhematic (countable and uncountable, plural rhematics)

  1. (linguistics) The provision of new information regarding the current theme.
  2. (chiefly linguistics, obsolete, rare) In the work of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834): the doctrine or study of arranging words into sentences clearly.

Adjective

rhematic (not comparable)

  1. Of or pertaining to a rheme.
    1. (linguistics) Of a part of a sentence: providing new information regarding the current theme.
    2. (Peircean semiotics) Of or pertaining to a sumisign (a sign that represents its object in respect of quality and so, in its signified interpretant, is represented as a character or mark).
  2. (obsolete) Of or pertaining to word formation.
  3. (obsolete, rare) In Coleridge's work: relating to the arrangement of words into sentences clearly.
  4. (grammar, obsolete, rare) Having a verb for its base; derived from a verb.

Synonyms

  • (derived from a verb): verbal

Further reading

  • Rheme on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Mechitar, athermic

rhematic From the web:

  • what rheumatic fever
  • what rheumatic disease
  • what rheumatic heart disease
  • what's rheumatic pain
  • what rheumatic fever means
  • what's rheumatic disorder
  • what rheumatic chorea
  • rheumatic fever
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