proleptic
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From prolepsis (“anticipation”) + -ic.
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /pɹoʊˈlɛptɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Adjective
[edit]proleptic (comparative more proleptic, superlative most proleptic)
- (of a calendar) Extrapolated to dates prior to its first adoption; of those used to adjust to or from the Julian calendar or Gregorian calendar.
- 1999, Kenneth R. Lang, Astrophysical Formulae: Space, Time, Matter and Cosmology, volume II, Springer, →ISBN, page 70:
- The Julian proleptic calendar is formed by applying the rules of the Julian calendar to times before Caesar's reform, and the Julian date (JD) specifies the particular instant of a day by ending the Julian day number with the fraction of the day elapsed since the preceding Greenwich noon.
- 2022, Tomasz Lelek, Jon Skeet, Software Mistakes and Tradeoffs: How to Make Good Programming Decisions, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 155:
- The .NET epoch is midnight at the start of January 1st, AD 1, although that's AD 1 in a proleptic Gregorian calendar, which refers to even more complexity we haven't talked about yet.
- Anticipatory; prescient or forward-looking.
- 1844, Thomas De Quincey, “Greece Under the Romans”, in Blackwood's Magazine:
- A far-seeing or proleptic wisdom.
- 1892, Emmanuel Pétavel-Olliff, The Problem of Immortality, page 208:
- In contrast with physical death, spiritual death might be called metaphorical. It becomes proleptic when contrasted with the second and final death.
- 1985 June, Anthony Burgess, “The Prisoner of Fame”, in The Atlantic[1]:
- Herbert Gorman’s life of Joyce was written not only when Finnegans Wake was a long way from completion but with the handicap of the subject himself insisting on a hagiography featuring a prolonged, if proleptic, martyrdom.
- 1989, W. Paul Jones, Theological Worlds, Nashville: Abingdon Press, page 151:
- In World Two, Jesus can be seen as the proleptic event, giving promise of God's vindication of creation in and through history.
- 1995, John S. Murphy, Frederic M. Hudson, The Joy of Old: A Guide to Successful Elderhood, page 41:
- In a world of youth idolatry, we easily lose our proleptic quality after the first peak, and become regressive, looking back toward the peaks already passed.
- 2020, Randal Joy Thompson, Proleptic Leadership on the Commons:
- Viewing the commons as a vehicle for a new world order, Randal Joy Thompson proposes ‘proleptic leadership’, which envisions how leaders will continue to be essential as the custodians of responsible agency and conscious choice.
- Exhibiting or pertaining to prolepsis (any sense)
- 1904, Aeschylus, Arthur Woollgar Verrall, The 'Agamemnon' of Aeschylus, page 90:
- a 'proleptic' epithet describing the result of the hunt, means literally 'with leafage broken' and is formed from the stem of ἀγνύναι.
- 1985, W. Randall Garr, Dialect Geography of Syria-Palestine, 1000-586 B.C.E, page 168:
- There was no proleptic suffix in Moabite, according to the present evidence.
- 2005, Jaime Esteban Salvo, The Effect of Nitrogen and Plant Growth Regulators on Sylleptic and Proleptic Shoot Development of 'Hass' Avocado (Persea Americana Mill.), page 104:
- Starting in the spring of the second year, one terminal indeterminate floral shoot ( I ) was included at every terminal proleptic shoot ( L ) that arose from each proleptic and sylleptic shoot in the summer and full flush of the previous year.
- 2015 September 8, Alex Preston, “Submission by Michel Houellebecq review – satire that’s more subtle than it seems”, in The Guardian[2], →ISSN:
- Submission, as is fitting for a dystopia written in the mode of the “not yet”, ends in a proleptic future tense, speaking of what will come for François and (with rather less authorial interest) for the people of France.
- 2017 August 26, Bret Stephens, “Tips for Aspiring Op-Ed Writers”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
- 8) Be proleptic, a word that comes from the Greek for “anticipation.” That is, get the better of the major objection to your argument by raising and answering it in advance.
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]calendar: extrapolated to dates prior to its first adoption
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having been assigned too early a date
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See also
[edit]Noun
[edit]proleptic (plural proleptics)
- An instance of prolepsis;
- The placement of an element in a syntactic unit before that to which it would logically correspond.
- Information about the outcome of a story placed near the beginning.
- A lateral branch that develops from a lateral meristem, after the formation of a bud or following a period of dormancy, when the lateral meristem is split from a terminal meristem.
- Something that predicts or implies the future or outcome.