cymoscope
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- cymatoscope (philologically prescribed, but sees little actual use)
- kumascope
Etymology
[edit]First attested as cymatoscope in 1903 and as cymoscope in 1905; formed as cȳm- (the short stem of the Latin cȳma, from the Ancient Greek κῦμα (kûma), kūma, “wave”) + -o- + -scope. Cymatoscope is philologically prescribed in place of cymoscope because it preserves the long stem (κῡμᾰτ- (kūmăt-), kūmat-) of its ultimate Ancient Greek etymon, which properly does not form compounds on its short stem (κῡμ- (kūm-), kūm-).
Pronunciation
[edit]- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: sīʹməskōp, IPA(key): /ˈsaɪməskəʊp/
Noun
[edit]cymoscope (plural cymoscopes)
- (wireless telegraphy, disused) A detector of electromagnetic waves.
- 1905, Engineering, LXXIX, page 742:
- Apparatus belonging to any of these groups might all be called a cymoscope, or wave-detector.
References
[edit]- “cymoscope” listed in the Oxford English Dictionary [2nd ed., 1989]