hermeneut
English
    
    Etymology
    
Borrowed from Ancient Greek ἑρμηνευτής (hermēneutḗs, “interpreter”).
Noun
    
hermeneut (plural hermeneuts)
- (philosophy) A practitioner of hermeneutics: someone who interprets a text.
-  1857 May 25, Professor Lumsden, “Conversion of the Jews”, in Proceedings of the Scotland Free Church General Assembly, page 46:- Moses, full of sacrificial institutes, is the text, Isaiah and all the prophets are the hermeneuts […] .
 
-  1989, George H. Jensen, “Introduction”, in Post-Jungian Criticism, page 3:- He was a hermeneut who worked out striking interpretations of texts.
 
-  1999, James A. Boon, Verging on Extra-vagance:- Oh, an ardent hermeneut might try to distinguish his or her own experience as more intensively "pop" than that of less authentic metaconsumers passing through Coke's world.
 
-  2008, Michael Vannoy Adams, “The Archetypal School”, in Cambridge Companion to Jung, page 114:- In short, Hillman is not a hermeneut but an imagist, or phenomenologist, who sticks to the image, adheres to the phenomenon, and adamantly refuses to interpret it, or reduce it to a concept.
 
 
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Synonyms
    
Translations
    
hermeneut
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Dutch
    
    Etymology
    
Ultimately from Ancient Greek ἑρμηνευτής (hermēneutḗs). This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˌɦɛr.məˈnœy̯t/
- Hyphenation: her‧me‧neut
- Rhymes: -œy̯t
Derived terms
    
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