English
Etymology
From Middle English logicien, logissian, from Old French logicien.
Pronunciation
Noun
logician (plural logicians)
- A person who studies or teaches logic.
“To the logician all things should be seen exactly as they are.” ― “The Greek Interpreter”, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1894
Translations
person who studies or teaches logic
- Arabic: مَنْطِقِيّ (manṭiqiyy)
- Armenian: տրամաբան (hy) (tramaban)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 論理學者/论理学者, 论理学者 (lùnlǐ xuézhě), 邏輯學家/逻辑学家 (zh) (luójíxuéjiā), 逻辑学家 (zh) (luójí xuéjiā)
- Czech: logik m
- Dutch: logicus (nl) m
- Estonian: loogik
- Finnish: loogikko (fi)
- French: logicien (fr) m, logicienne (fr) f
- German: Logiker m, Logikerin f
- Greek: λογικολόγος (el) m or f (logikológos)
- (deprecated template usage)
{{trans-mid}}
- Japanese: 論理学者 (ronri gakusha)
- Korean: 논리 학자 (nolli hakja) (論理學者)
- Macedonian: логичар m (logičar), логичарка f (logičarka)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: logiker m
- Nynorsk: logikar m
- Portuguese: lógico (pt) m
- Romanian: logician (ro) m, logiciană (ro) f
- Russian: ло́гик (ru) m (lógik)
- Serbo-Croatian: lògičār (sh) m, lògičārka (sh) f
- Slovak: logik m, logička f
- Spanish: lógico (es) m, lógica (es) f
- Swedish: logiker (sv)
- Telugu: తార్కికుడు (te) (tārkikuḍu)
|