Sophisticate vs Sophist - What's the difference?
sophisticate | sophist |
A worldly-wise person
* '' , episode ''Sailor Mouth
To make less natural or innocent.
* 1956–1960 , (second edition, 1960), chapter ii: “Motives and Motivation”, page 38:
To practice sophistry; change the meaning of, or be vague about in order to mislead or deceive.
To alter and make impure, as with the intention to deceive.
To make more complex or refined.
Adulterated; not pure; not genuine.
* Dryden
One of a class of teachers of rhetoric, philosophy, and politics in ancient Greece.
A teacher who used plausible but fallacious reasoning.
One who is captious, fallacious, or deceptive in argument.
As nouns the difference between sophisticate and sophist
is that sophisticate is a worldly-wise person while sophist is one of a class of teachers of rhetoric, philosophy, and politics in ancient greece.As a verb sophisticate
is to make less natural or innocent.As an adjective sophisticate
is adulterated; not pure; not genuine.sophisticate
English
Noun
(en noun)- Patrick: Because classy sophisticates like us should not stain our lips with cursing.
- SpongeBob: Yea verily!
Verb
(sophisticat)- Psychologists have developed quasi-causal theories to explain'' the directedness of behaviour, to answer the question ‘Why are certain sorts of reasons operative?’ and these theories may well have insinuated themselves into ordinary language as part of the meaning of “motive”. It might well be, therefore, that people who are slightly sophisticated by psychological theories assume some such necessary connexion [''sc. between giving the motive for an action and making any assertions of a causal kind about a man’s emotional state].
- To sophisticate the understanding. — Southey.
- Yet Butler professes to stick to plain facts, not to sophisticate , not to refine. — M. Arnold.
- To sophisticate wine. — Howell.
- They purchase but sophisticated ware. — Dryden.
Adjective
(en adjective)- So truth, while only one supplied the state, / Grew scarce and dear, and yet sophisticate .
sophist
English
(wikipedia sophist)Noun
(en noun)Usage notes
* The meaning of "sophist" can vary depending on the time period to which one is referring. A sophist of the earliest period was a master in his art or craft who demonstrated (taught by example) his practical skill/learning in exchange for pay. Later sophists were providers of a well-rounded education intended to give pupils arete'' – "virtue, human excellence". By late antiquity, ''sophist?s'' / ''sophistes'' tended to denote exclusively a skilled public speaker and/or teacher of rhetoric.''Dictionary of Philosophy'', (ed.), Philosophical Library, 1962. ''See:'' "Sophists" by Max Fishler, p. 295."History of the name ‘Sophist’," ''Encyclopedia Britannica'' at ''www.britannica.com .
