See also: oníric

English

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (UK) IPA(key): /əʊ.ˈnɪ.ɹɪk/
  • (US) IPA(key): /oʊ.ˈnɪ.ɹɪk/
  • Hyphenation: o‧ni‧ric

Adjective

edit

oniric (comparative more oniric, superlative most oniric)

  1. Alternative form of oneiric
    An oniric feeling permeates the whole film.
    The foggy effect gives an oniric feeling to the whole picture.
    • 1923, Clinical Diagnosis: Case Examination and the Analysis of Symptoms, Vol. 2, p. 785–786:
      Oniric or dream-like delirium is by far the commonest form the non-specialized practitioner has occasion to witness. [...] Oniric delirium is an actual somnambulistic state, a second state.
    • 2006, Gigliola Nocera, "Raymond Carver's America profonda", Journal of the Short Story in English, No. 46, online version:
      It may also reveal itself through a couple's mourning over a lost love which, mysteriously sublimated at the oniric level, suddenly surfaces as in the dreams of the protagonist in "Fat", or revisited through the Faulknerian theme of incest between a brother and sister, as in Furious Seasons.
edit

References

edit
  • "oniric", MondoFacto Medical Dictionary

Anagrams

edit

Romanian

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from French onirique.

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

oniric m or n (feminine singular onirică, masculine plural onirici, feminine and neuter plural onirice)

  1. oneiric

Declension

edit

References

edit