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单词 stigmatic
释义

Definition of stigmatic in English:

stigmatic

adjective stɪɡˈmatɪkstɪɡˈmædɪk
  • 1Relating to a stigma or stigmas, in particular constituting or conveying a mark of disgrace.

    有污名的,耻辱的

    the less stigmatic offence of manslaughter
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In 1924, the name of the hospital changed from Lunatic Asylum to a less stigmatic Mysore Mental Hospital.
    • They are more likely to seek help for their problems because counseling is becoming more acceptable and less stigmatic.
    • So I know I'm not alone in this stigmatic attitude towards people who form internet relationships that then spill over into ‘real life’.
    • If there is no workable defence of insanity, it is surely wrong to convict a grossly disordered killer of murder when the less stigmatic offence of manslaughter is at hand.
    • Somatic symptoms in those cases are accepted ways of expressing distress and getting help in a less stigmatic way than usual psychiatric care.
    • According to science, there is no perfect profile that sticks to this stigmatic paraphilia - the job descriptions, sexual orientations, age and race of these people are random.
    • Founded exactly 25 years ago, this group of ostentatious do-gooders vow ‘to promulgate universal joy and expiate stigmatic guilt’.
    • He attributed his current inactivity to the ‘the whole stigmatic factor, and also other people's fear of the disease.’
  • 2

    another term for anastigmatic
noun stɪɡˈmatɪkstɪɡˈmædɪk
  • A person bearing stigmata.

    有圣伤痕者

    stigmatics apparently bearing the wounds of Christ's Crucifixion
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The eponymous stigmatic of Hansen's book may ultimately be opaque, too, but she is rendered in three dimensions, with sexual, psychic, and spiritual longings ambiguous but palpable.
    • It seems that the vast majority of stigmatics have been women.
    • The twentieth century's two best-known stigmatics - Theresa Neumann and Padre Pio - were suspected of deception.
    • Padre Pio was a controversial cult figure and alleged stigmatic.
    • One of the more recent stigmatics claimed not only to have Christ's wounds but also that religious statues wept in his presence.

Derivatives

  • stigmatically

  • adverb
    • The ignorance of history, literature, science and the very use of their native language is the shameful defect stigmatically stamped upon most (of course, not all) the students that I have had in my courses at the University over the last thirty years.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • For the mass separation of the fission products a stigmatically focused magnetic deflection system was used.
      • The oval cylinder includes means for shaping the main focus lens to focus the three electron beams stigmatically near ground potential and to converge the outer beams at the center of the screen.
      • If anything it's getting worse - back then everyone played arcade games, but games now are becoming stigmatically gender-specific.

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense '(person) marked with a blemish or deformity'): from Latin stigma, stigmat- + -ic.

Rhymes

achromatic, acrobatic, Adriatic, aerobatic, anagrammatic, aquatic, aristocratic, aromatic, asthmatic, athematic, attic, autocratic, automatic, axiomatic, bureaucratic, charismatic, chromatic, cinematic, climatic, dalmatic, democratic, diagrammatic, diaphragmatic, diplomatic, dogmatic, dramatic, ecstatic, emblematic, emphatic, enigmatic, epigrammatic, erratic, fanatic, hepatic, hieratic, hydrostatic, hypostatic, idiomatic, idiosyncratic, isochromatic, lymphatic, melodramatic, meritocratic, miasmatic, monochromatic, monocratic, monogrammatic, numismatic, operatic, panchromatic, pancreatic, paradigmatic, phlegmatic, photostatic, piratic, plutocratic, pneumatic, polychromatic, pragmatic, prelatic, prismatic, problematic, programmatic, psychosomatic, quadratic, rheumatic, schematic, schismatic, sciatic, semi-automatic, Socratic, somatic, static, sub-aquatic, sylvatic, symptomatic, systematic, technocratic, thematic, theocratic, thermostatic, traumatic

Definition of stigmatic in US English:

stigmatic

adjectivestiɡˈmadikstɪɡˈmædɪk
  • 1Relating to a stigma or stigmas, in particular constituting or conveying a mark of disgrace.

    有污名的,耻辱的

    the less stigmatic offense of manslaughter
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In 1924, the name of the hospital changed from Lunatic Asylum to a less stigmatic Mysore Mental Hospital.
    • If there is no workable defence of insanity, it is surely wrong to convict a grossly disordered killer of murder when the less stigmatic offence of manslaughter is at hand.
    • Founded exactly 25 years ago, this group of ostentatious do-gooders vow ‘to promulgate universal joy and expiate stigmatic guilt’.
    • According to science, there is no perfect profile that sticks to this stigmatic paraphilia - the job descriptions, sexual orientations, age and race of these people are random.
    • Somatic symptoms in those cases are accepted ways of expressing distress and getting help in a less stigmatic way than usual psychiatric care.
    • So I know I'm not alone in this stigmatic attitude towards people who form internet relationships that then spill over into ‘real life’.
    • They are more likely to seek help for their problems because counseling is becoming more acceptable and less stigmatic.
    • He attributed his current inactivity to the ‘the whole stigmatic factor, and also other people's fear of the disease.’
  • 2

    another term for anastigmatic
nounstiɡˈmadikstɪɡˈmædɪk
  • A person bearing stigmata.

    有圣伤痕者

    stigmatics apparently bearing the wounds of Christ's Crucifixion
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Padre Pio was a controversial cult figure and alleged stigmatic.
    • The twentieth century's two best-known stigmatics - Theresa Neumann and Padre Pio - were suspected of deception.
    • The eponymous stigmatic of Hansen's book may ultimately be opaque, too, but she is rendered in three dimensions, with sexual, psychic, and spiritual longings ambiguous but palpable.
    • One of the more recent stigmatics claimed not only to have Christ's wounds but also that religious statues wept in his presence.
    • It seems that the vast majority of stigmatics have been women.

Origin

Late 16th century (in the sense ‘(person) marked with a blemish or deformity’): from Latin stigma, stigmat- + -ic.

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更新时间:2024/12/27 19:06:29