economics
nounEtymology
From economic (noun) (obsolete) + -s (suffix forming pluralia tantum, and regular plural forms of nouns). Economic is derived from Middle English economike, iconomique (“household management”), and then: * from Middle French iconomique, oeconomique, and Old French iconomike (“(noun) household management; person in charge of household management; (adjective) relating to household management; relating to domestic or family matters; relating to management of a state; reducing costs or expenses, economical”) (modern French économique); and * from their etymon Latin oeconomicus (“(noun) household manager, housekeeper, steward; (adjective) relating to orderly arrangement of written material”) (whence Late Latin economicus (“relating to (management of) a household”)), and economica (“household management”), both from Ancient Greek οἰκονομῐκός (oikonomĭkós, “skilled in household management; frugal, thrifty, economical”) (whence Koine Greek οἰκονομῐκός (oikonomĭkós, “relating to orderly arrangement of written material”)); from οἰκονόμος (oikonómos, “master of a house; household manager, steward; administrator, manager”) + -ῐκός (-ĭkós, suffix meaning ‘of or relating to’ forming adjectives). Οἰκονόμος (Oikonómos) is derived from οἶκος (oîkos, “dwelling place, house; estate”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *weyḱ- (“(verb) to enter in; to settle; (noun) settlement”)) + νόμος (nómos, “law, ordinance”) (from νέμω (némō, “to distribute; to possess”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *nem- (“to distribute; to give; to take”)) + -ος (-os, suffix forming o-grade action nouns from verbs)). By surface analysis, econom(y) + -ics (suffix forming nouns denoting fields of knowledge or practice).
- derived from oeconomicus — “(noun) household manager, housekeeper, steward; (adjective) relating to orderly arrangement of written material”
- derived from iconomike — “(noun) household management; person in charge of household management; (adjective) relating to household management; relating to domestic or family matters; relating to management of a state; reducing costs or expenses, economical”
- derived from iconomique
- inherited from economike
Definitions
Now chiefly home economics
Now chiefly home economics: the art or science of household management, especially relating to the appropriate organization of resources; housekeeping.
The study of resource and wealth allocation, consumption, and distribution, of capital…
The study of resource and wealth allocation, consumption, and distribution, of capital and investment, and of management of the factors of production.
- Mary studied economics for five years before going into banking.
- [L]et him accept and hive every fact of chemistry, natural history, and economics; the more he has, the less is he willing to spare any one.
plural of economic (“one who is skilled in household management
plural of economic (“one who is skilled in household management; (Christianity, historical) one who manages the income of a vacant benefice”).
The neighborhood
- synonymeconomics
- synonymdismal science
- synonympolitical economy
- neighboreconomy
- neighborcapital
- neighborconsumption
- neighborcurrency
- neighbordemand
- neighborinflation
- neighborinterest
- neighborinvestment
- neighborloss
- neighbormarket
- neighbormoney
- neighborprice
Derived
agroeconomics, applied economics, behavioral economics, bioeconomics, Buddhist economics, burgernomics, Bushonomics, business economics, Carternomics, clinicoeconomics, Clintonomics, counter-economics, countereconomics, demand-side economics, economese, economics of scale, Enronomics, exergoeconomics, financial economics, Fordonomics, freeconomics, genoeconomics, geoeconomics, Hitlernomics, home economics, hydroeconomics, Johnsonomics, Kennedynomics, Lincolnomics, macroeconomics, mathematical economics, mesoeconomics, microeconomics, nanoeconomics, neuroeconomics, Nixonomics, -nomics, normative economics, Obamanomics, pakodanomics · +17 more
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for economics. 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