English edit

Etymology edit

medium +‎ -ic

Adjective edit

mediumic (comparative more mediumic, superlative most mediumic)

  1. Relating to spiritual mediums.
    • 2008, Anna L. Peterson, Latin American Religions: Histories and Documents in Context:
      Descarrego, literally a “discharge” or “unloading,” signals a world of spiritual affliction and intervention connected with Brazil's mediumic religions.
  2. Relating to a medium of communication.
    • 2000, Clive Scott, Translating Baudelaire, page 78:
      It is intralingual translation which is most likely to train us out of instrumental attitudes to language and into mediumic ones.
    • 2013, Cynthia Chris, Media Authorship, page 144:
      While some may be willing to grant that the determinative forces noted in the preceding text―hardware, operating systems, programming languages, industry watchdogs, and so on―are key to computer game development, others may argue that, despite this fact, such forces are only peripheral and mediumic, and not authorial.

Alternative forms edit