Didactic vs Castigate - What's the difference?
didactic | castigate |
Instructive or intended to teach or demonstrate, especially with regard to morality. (I.e., didactic poetry)
* Macaulay
Excessively moralizing.
(medicine) Teaching from textbooks rather than laboratory demonstration and clinical application.
To punish severely; to criticize severely; to reprimand severely.
* 1977 , , Penguin Classics, p. 261:
To revise or make corrections to a publication.
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As an adjective didactic
is didactic.As a verb castigate is
to punish severely; to criticize severely; to reprimand severely.didactic
English
Alternative forms
* didactick (obsolete)Adjective
(en adjective)- The finest didactic poem in any language.
Derived terms
* didact * didactical * didactically * didacticismcastigate
English
Verb
(castigat)- The curse of avarice and cupidity / Is all my sermon, for it frees the pelf. / Out come the pence, and specially for myself, / For my exclusive purpose is to win / And not at all to castigate their sin.
