See also: Nomic

English edit

Etymology edit

From Ancient Greek νομικός (nomikós, relating to laws), from νόμος (nómos, law, custom).

Adjective edit

nomic (not comparable)

  1. (dated) Customary; ordinary; applied to the usual spelling of a language, in distinction from strictly phonetic methods.
    • 1899, Henry Sweet, The Practical Study of Languages:
      The first and most obvious objection brought against the use of a phonetic notation in teaching a foreign language is the danger of confusion between the phonetic and the nomic spelling of the language.
  2. (sciences, philosophy) Relating to a law.

Anagrams edit