dynamitic
adjEtymology
From Ancient Greek δυναμικός (dunamikós, “powerful”), from δύναμις (dúnamis, “power”), from δύναμαι (dúnamai, “I am able”).
- derived from δυναμικός
Definitions
Involving the use of dynamite.
- And two days later: There have been more attempts at explosions discovered. Dynamitic portmanteaus of evidently American origin have been found at Charing Cross and Paddington Stations.
Explosive
Explosive; volatile.
Characterized by movement or change
Characterized by movement or change; dynamic.
- The punctuality of news writing and reading—its “dynamitic” potential—is distinct from the timelessness of fictive discourse, which seeks to suspend a reader's sense of duration, the better to seduce the reader into the world of its text.
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Misconstruction of dynamic.
- The adaptive filter tunes its gain automatically based on the system dynamitic sensed by the movement state to yield optimal performance.
- As labor force participation rates change, they affect unemployment rates and other variables within the model, and once again the model's dynamitics come into play.
- “I’m super stoked for this year,” Steketee said this week. “We have amazing girls that are returning and our team dynamitic is extremely powerful. They get along well and really want to work hard for each other.”
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for dynamitic. 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