Difference between revisions of "Sceptic - septic"

From Hull AWE
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 7: Line 7:
 
* '''Septic''', on the other hand, is virtually always an adjective.  Its basic meaning is 'infected' or 'poisonous' in a particular way.  If you scratch your hand and do not wash the place, it may turn septic: that is, it may be painful, ooze yellow or white matter, and eventually poison your blood.  The [[abstract noun]] that names the phenomenon is '''sepsis'''; control of the infection is '''asepsis''', and a nurse should take '''aseptic''' or '''antiseptic measures'''.   
 
* '''Septic''', on the other hand, is virtually always an adjective.  Its basic meaning is 'infected' or 'poisonous' in a particular way.  If you scratch your hand and do not wash the place, it may turn septic: that is, it may be painful, ooze yellow or white matter, and eventually poison your blood.  The [[abstract noun]] that names the phenomenon is '''sepsis'''; control of the infection is '''asepsis''', and a nurse should take '''aseptic''' or '''antiseptic measures'''.   
  
:'''Septic''' and its relations are pronounced as they look, with a simple '-s-' at the beginning, {{IPA|'sɛp tɪk}}.  So they are different from the '''sceptic''' family, in spelling and pronunciation.  Don't, as many undergraduates have done, confuse them.
+
:::'''Septic''' and its relations are pronounced as they look, with a simple '-s-' at the beginning, {{IPA|'sɛp tɪk}}.  So they are different from the '''sceptic''' family, in spelling and pronunciation.  Don't, as many undergraduates have done, confuse them.
  
 
[[Category:Malapropisms]]  
 
[[Category:Malapropisms]]  

Revision as of 02:09, 26 March 2017

Sceptic is a term basically of philosophy. Septic is basically used in medicine and other biological sciences. (In American English, sceptic is spelled with a '-k-' - skeptic.)

  • A sceptic, in general English, is someone who tests the truth of everything, and is not inclined to believe things easily. Technically, in the academic subject of Philosophy, a Sceptic is 'a follower of the school of Pyrrho and his successors', (Chambers). Sceptic is usually a noun; nowadays, the usual adjective is sceptical. The American English spelling skeptic is logical, helpful - and unacceptable, in Britain.
Sceptic - and all other related words, like sceptical and scepticism - is pronounced with the first two consonants clearly enunciated: 'SKEPtic', IPA: /'skɛp tɪk/. The beginning of the word sounds like that of 'school', not 'scene'.
  • Septic, on the other hand, is virtually always an adjective. Its basic meaning is 'infected' or 'poisonous' in a particular way. If you scratch your hand and do not wash the place, it may turn septic: that is, it may be painful, ooze yellow or white matter, and eventually poison your blood. The abstract noun that names the phenomenon is sepsis; control of the infection is asepsis, and a nurse should take aseptic or antiseptic measures.
Septic and its relations are pronounced as they look, with a simple '-s-' at the beginning, IPA: /'sɛp tɪk/. So they are different from the sceptic family, in spelling and pronunciation. Don't, as many undergraduates have done, confuse them.