English edit

Etymology edit

ideolect +‎ -ic

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

ideolectic (not comparable)

  1. Alternative form of idiolectic
    • 1980, Crispin Wright, Wittgenstein on the foundations of mathematics, →ISBN, page 217:
      The picture thus encourages our drift into the idea that each of us has some sort of privileged access to the character of his own understanding of an expression ; each of us knows of an ideolectic pattern of use, for which there is a strong presumption, when sufficient evidence has accumulated, that it is shared communally.
    • 1984, Marlene Dolitsky, Under the Tumtum Tree, →ISBN:
      But the interpretation of neologisms is manifold and there is much more cognitive linguistic space to navigate in, and meaning assignation may be different for each participant according to his/her own ideolectic semantic and phonetic networks.
    • 1996, Magne Sæbø, Christianus Brekelmans, Hebrew Bible / Old Testament. III, →ISBN:
      In such ideolectic transpositions the danger exists to forget that finally all talking about God remains figurative language not to be literalized and that, on the other side, in the descriptions of divine activities of the Hebrew Bible female features are not lacking.