emic
See also: EMIC
English
Etymology
Coined by American linguist Kenneth Pike in 1954 from phonemic.
- Kenneth Lee Pike (1982) Linguistic Concepts: An Introduction to Tagmemics, page 44: “Generalizing from phonemics, I coined the term emic in 1954.”
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈiːmɪk/
- Rhymes: -iːmɪk
- Hyphenation: e‧mic
Adjective
emic (comparative more emic, superlative most emic)
- (social sciences, anthropology) Of or pertaining to the analysis of a cultural system or its features from the perspective of a participant in that culture.
- 1996, Advanced Methodological Issues in Culturally Competent Evaluation for Substance Abuse Prevention:
- A useful example of the emic-etic distinction may be made by comparing the concept “waves on the ocean or sea” from the perspective of a European American with that of a Truk Islander […] The proposed etics here might be that both cultures understand the use of waves as vehicles for surfing and as movement reflecting the transfer of energy […] certain differences, or emics exist, for European Americans the waves may be sources of beauty — the Truk Islander has learned to use them […] as a road map.
- 2015, John P. Cooper, Dionisius A. Agius, Tom Collie and Faisal al-Naimi, “Boat and ship engravings at al-Zubārah, Qatar: the dāw exposed?”, in Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies, volume 45: Papers from the forty-eighth meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies held at the British Museum, London, 25 to 27 July 2014 (2015), →ISSN, pages 35–47:
- In contemporary Anglophone usage, the term 'dhow' has come to refer generically and exonymically to traditional wooden vessels of the western Indian Ocean, whatever their particular forms or emic classification.
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Coordinate terms
Translations
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