A.Word.A.Day |
About | Media | Search | Contact |
Home
|
Oct 4, 2011
This week's themeThere is a word for it This week's words hebephrenia retrodiction onomasticon anosognosia keening This week's comments AWADmail 484 Next week's theme Negative words Discuss Feedback RSS/XML A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargretrodiction
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: Using present information to make an assertion about the past; an instance of such an assertion.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin retro- (back) + dicere (to say). Ultimately from the
Indo-European root deik- (to show, to pronounce solemnly), which
is also the source of judge, verdict, vendetta, revenge, indicate,
dictate, and paradigm. Earliest documented use: 1895.
USAGE:
"Dan Gardner, for all his concern about prediction, has no qualms about
retrodiction, even of the distant, unknowable past." Kathryn Schulz; What Lies Ahead?; The New York Times; Mar 27, 2011. "Turning to comets, F. Richard Stephenson matches modern retrodiction against Babylonian and Chinese records to conclude that we have been sighting Halley's comet on each of its returns since 240 BCE." Michael S. Mahoney; Standing on the Shoulders of Giants; Science (Washington, DC); May 17, 1991. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Fear is the tax that conscience pays to guilt. -George Sewell, physician and writer (1690-1736)
|
|
© 1994-2024 Wordsmith