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peripatetic
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Peripatetic
English
Alternative forms
- peripatetick (obsolete)
- Peripatetic (Aristotelian)
Etymology
From French péripatétique, from Latin peripatēticus, from Ancient Greek περιπατητικός (peripatētikós, “given to walking around”), from περιπατέω (peripatéō, “I walk around”), from περί (perí, “around”) (English peri-)+ πατέω (patéō, “I walk”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
peripatetic (comparative more peripatetic, superlative most peripatetic)
- Tending to walk about.
- Constantly travelling.
- (philosophy, usually capitalized) Alternative letter-case form of Peripatetic.
- 1642, James Howell, Instructions For Foreign Travel:
- The true peripatetic school.
- 1961, Harry E. Wedeck, Dictionary of Aphrodisiacs, New York: The Citadel Press, page 75:
- Demetreius of Phalerum, a peripatetic philosopher of the fourth century B.C., wrote an amatory treatise entitled Eroticus - no longer, however, extant.
Translations
walking about; itinerant
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constantly traveling
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Having to do with Aristotle's philosophy or school of thought
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Noun
peripatetic (plural peripatetics)
- One who walks about; a pedestrian; an itinerant.
- Synonyms: wayfarer, itinerant, pedestrian, nomad
- (philosophy, usually capitalized) Alternative letter-case form of Peripatetic (“Aristotelian”).
- 1961, Albert Upton, Design for Thinking: A First Book in Semantics, section 11:
- He who would think clearly must think like a peripatetic even if he is unwilling to walk like one.
Translations
one who walks about; a pedestrian; an itinerant
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Aristotelian — see Aristotelian
Anagrams
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Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from French péripatétique.
Adjective
peripatetic m or n (feminine singular peripatetică, masculine plural peripatetici, feminine and neuter plural peripatetice)
Declension
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