ergonomics

noun
/ɜː.ɡəˈnɒ.mɪks/UK/ˌɜɹ.ɡəˈnɑ.mɪks/US/ˌɜɹ.ɡəˈnɒ.mɪks/CA/ɜː.ɡəˈnɔ.mɪks/

Etymology

From ergo- (prefix indicating work) + -nomics (suffix indicating the rules of a discipline), probably modelled after Polish ergonomia (“ergonomics”) (used by Polish scientist Wojciech Jastrzębowski (1799–1882) in an 1857 article), from Ancient Greek ἔργον (érgon, “work”) + νόμος (nómos, “custom; law, ordinance”). The English word is widely regarded as having been introduced by British psychologist K. F. Hywel Murrell at a meeting at the Admiralty in London in July 1949, which led to the establishment of the Ergonomics Research Society (now The Chartered Institute of Ergonomics and Human Factors) on 17 September 1949.

  1. derived from ἔργον
  2. derived from ergonomia

Definitions

  1. The science of the design of equipment, especially so as to reduce operator fatigue,…

    The science of the design of equipment, especially so as to reduce operator fatigue, discomfort and injury.

    • Ergonomics is increasingly important in office-product design.
  2. Political economy.

    • As the titlepage of this latter portion of his work indicates, M. Courcelle Seneuil confines himself to political economy considered as a practical science, or, as he chooses to call it, to ergonomics.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for ergonomics. 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