diachronic
adj/daɪ.əˈkɹɒnɪk/UK/daɪ.əˈkɹɑnɪk/US
Etymology
By surface analysis, dia- + chron- + -ic; historically, see synchronous § Etymology.
Definitions
Occurring over or changing with time.
- […] one salient value of archival magazine preservation is that individual issues register, however unintentionally, the small, incremental, diachronic movements within a culture.
Of, pertaining to or concerned with changes that occur over time.
- It is plain that natural science has developed more diachronic concern, more of the longer historical approach in its interests and repertory, in the last two centuries than in the two millennia before.
- I also take a more diachronic perspective and relate the growth of empire to changes in the regional market system as they occurred in the transition from the Early Aztec to the Late Aztec periods.
- In short, it's usual for the syuzhet to appear more diachronic at the beginning and more synchronic at the end.
The neighborhood
- synonymdiachronical
- neighbordiachrony
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for diachronic. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA