As a proper noun logos
is (philosophy) in ancient greek philosophy, the rational principle that governs the cosmos.
As an adjective logological is
of or pertaining to logology; related to the study of words.
logos Etymology 1
From (etyl) .
Noun
(-)
(rhetoric) A form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker uses logic as the main argument.
Coordinate terms
* (form of rhetoric) ethos, pathos
Etymology 2
Noun
(head)
Anagrams
*
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logological English
Adjective
( -)
Of or pertaining to logology; related to the study of words.
(linguistics) Of or pertaining to conceptual patterns or mental categories of words and their referents.
* 2007 , Rafael Art Javier, The Bilingual Mind: Thinking, feeling and speaking in two languages , page 26
- When the "particular-experiential structures " (infralogical structures) are encoded and organized into kinds (or classes, relations, or propositions), logological structures are said to be in place.
(theology, philosophy, rare) Of or pertaining to the doctrine of logos.
Related terms
* logologist
* logology
See also
* logologic
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