[1650–60; casuist + -ic]This word is first recorded in the period 1650–60. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: cardholder, gas, parade, romantic, triplet-ic is a suffix forming adjectives from other parts of speech, occurring originally inGreek and Latin loanwords (metallic; poetic; archaic; public) and, on this model, used as an adjective-forming suffix with the particular senses“having some characteristics of” (opposed to the simple attributive use of the basenoun) (balletic; sophomoric); “in the style of” (Byronic; Miltonic); “pertaining to a family of peoples or languages” (Finnic; Semitic; Turkic)
Examples of 'casuistic' in a sentence
casuistic
There was no escape from the casuistic logic of the witch-hunters.