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单词 academically
释义

academicallyadv.

Brit. /ˌakəˈdɛmᵻkli/, U.S. /ˌækəˈdɛmək(ə)li/
Forms: 1600s accademicallie, 1600s accademically, 1600s– academically.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: academical adj., -ly suffix2; academic adj., -ally suffix.
Etymology: Partly < academical adj. + -ly suffix2, and partly < academic adj. + -ally suffix. In sense 1 after French académiquement (1570 in Middle French in this sense; 1690 in sense 3).
1. In Philosophy: by or in the manner of Academic philosophers; Platonically; sceptically. Also: theoretically, without regard for practicality; disinterestedly.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > ancient Greek philosophy > post-Socratic philosophy > [adverb] > in the manner of sceptic philosophy
academically?1608
?1608 S. Lennard tr. P. Charron Of Wisdome Pref. sig. a8 I would willingly aduertise the Reader that shall vndertake to iudge of this Worke, to take heed that he fall not into any of these seuen ouersights, as some others haue done; that is: To referre that vnto law and dutie, which is proper vnto action; that vnto action, which is onely to be censured; that to resolution and determination, which is only proposed, consulted of, and problematically and Academically disputed [etc.].
1610 J. Healey tr. St. Augustine Citie of God xix. i. 752 Euery one of these positions may bee either maintained Stoically to bee certaine..or Accademically as vncertaine.
1660 W. Somner Treat. Gavelkind 147 I shall not here ingage as an opponent, onely invited by this fair occasion, crave leave to propound Academically, what in like case I find delivered by others, conducing (in my judgement) to facilitate the resolution.
1682 tr. F. M. van Helmont Cabbalistical Dial. 17 These doctrines I propose Accademically, and for Experiment sake.
1876 R. W. Emerson Ess. 1st Ser. x. 245 There are degrees in idealism. We learn first to play with it academically.
1900 Amer. Law Reg. 48 526 A casuist is one who academically applies moral principles to supposed cases.
1956 Rotarian Feb. 11/2 It remained for Hobbes and Locke dimly to foresee and academically to declare the basic issue which today divides the world.
1986 M. S. Schatz & J. E. Zimmerman tr. N. Berdiaev in Vekhi (1994) 13 Even the academically-minded Russian philosophers tend to be hostile to abstract rationalism.
2006 T. Reinhardt & M. Winterbottom Quintilian's Institutio Oratorio Bk. 2 378 The present chapter, however, considers ‘academically’ the issue of subject-matter independently of that of technicity.
2. By or in the manner of the members of a university or college; in relation to or as regards scholarship or education; in relation to or as regards reading, thinking, and study.
ΘΚΠ
society > education > place of education > [adverb] > educational institution
academicallya1626
a1626 J. Horsey Relacion Trav. in E. A. Bond Russia at Close of 16th Cent. (1856) 237 [We] toke Cambridge..one our waye..and wee wear verie accademicallie enterteyned.
1754 Monthly Rev. Aug. 112 The prevalence of bad taste in Italy, where the preference of the Orlando Furioso to the Gierusaleme liberata, was academically decreed.
1792 G. Wakefield Mem. 64 There is a painting of him, habited academically, as a Doctor of Divinity, in the college parlour, presented by his niece Mrs. Roberts.
1846 Ld. Campbell Lives Chancellors IV. cxii. 241 In 1668 he was entered of Emanuel College, Cambridge, but I find nothing more of him academically.
1898 F. Pollock & F. W. Maitland Hist. Eng. Law (ed. 2) I. i. vii. 208 His own knowledge of Roman law was by no means very deep when judged by the standard of his time, and we have little reason for believing that he had acquired it academically.
1941 Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists 25 1208 Although you can not find the word in the Oxford University English Dictionary, Micropaleontology has come of age both commercially and academically.
1966 H. Davies New London Spy (1967) 195 The Athenaeum has intellectual, rather than social, prestige; it is large and not cosy, but it does contain a great many academically distinguished people.
1980 Church Times 11 July 4/3 He believed that there were intelligent people in the parish who had not achieved academically.
2007 Big Issue 15 Jan. 6/1 Bourgeois, university-educated women will tend to marry men who are at least as academically able as themselves; and so the greater the number of academically qualified women, the more difficult it is for them to find a suitably qualified mate.
3. By or in the manner of the members of an academy for the cultivation and promotion of literature, of arts and sciences, or of some particular art or science or branch of these; in relation to or as regards such an academy.
ΚΠ
1841 W. B. S. Taylor Origin, Progress, & Present Condition Fine Arts in Great Brit. & Ireland II. xvi. 210 To the thousands of affluent and academically educated persons who visited the exhibition,..this classic composition was quite above their comprehension.
1879 Standard 1 July 4 Academically, Ireland is worse off than England.
1899 Westm. Gaz. 1 Feb. 2/3 Some day in the far future,..their merit will perhaps be recognised Academically.
1918 E. Pound in H. Zinnes Ezra Pound & Visual Arts (1980) i. 63 The nonagenarian public could also get its little garden scenes, its pictures with touching subjects, etc., without being subjected to..the terrible and unbounded moderns (as this term is Academically animadverted).
1923 Musical Times Feb. 95/2 There are dozens of audacities..upon which a more academically trained composer would probably not have ventured.
2008 J. N. Smith in P. H. Hassrick et al. In Contemp. Rhythm 308/1 Yet this is precisely what [Ernest L.] Blumenschein accomplished, despite being an academically trained and established artist about to turn forty years old.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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adv.?1608
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