analytic
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- analytick (obsolete)
Etymology
[edit]From Ancient Greek ἀναλυτικός (analutikós).
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]analytic (comparative more analytic, superlative most analytic)
- Of, or relating to any form of analysis, or to analytics.
- Of, or relating to division into elements or principles.
- Having the ability to analyse.
- (logic, of a proposition) that follows necessarily; tautologous.
- (mathematics) Of, or relating to algebra or a similar method of analysis.
- (mathematical analysis) Being defined in terms of objects of differential calculus such as derivatives.
- (mathematics, of a function) Being able to be locally represented by convergent power series around every point of the domain.
- (linguistics) Of a language, having a grammar principally dependent on the arrangement of uninflected words within sentences to indicate meaning. Compare synthetic.
Antonyms
[edit]- (antonym(s) of “logical”): contingent
Derived terms
[edit]- abstract analytic number theory
- analytically
- analytic capacity
- analytic combinatorics
- analytic continuation
- analytic cubism
- analytic element method
- analytic frame
- analytic function
- analytic geometry
- analytic hierarchy
- analytic induction
- analyticism
- analyticity
- analytic language
- analytic manifold
- analytic mechanics
- analytic number theory
- analytic philosopher
- analytic philosophy
- analytic proof
- analytic proposition
- analytic psychology
- analytic set
- analytic signal
- analytic solution
- analytic tradecraft
- analytic variety
- analytification
- bianalytic
- bioanalytic
- coanalytic
- cryptanalytic
- dianalytic
- electroanalytic
- hyperanalytic
- hypnoanalytic
- meta-analytic
- metanalytic
- microanalytic
- narcoanalytic
- nonanalytic
- psychoanalytic
- quasianalytic
- radioanalytic
- schizoanalytic
- semianalytic
- subanalytic
- teleoanalytic
- thermoanalytic
- topoanalytic
- unanalytic
Translations
[edit]relating to analysis
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relating to division into elements or principles
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able to analyze
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that follows necessarily
relating to algebra
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defined in terms of differential calculus
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using multiple simple words
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