olfactic
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun of action from Latin olfacere (“to smell (trans.)”), from olere (“to emit a smell”) (see odor) + facere (“to make”) (see factitious).[1]
Adjective
[edit]olfactic (comparative more olfactic, superlative most olfactic)
- Referring to the olfactory senses or the sense of smell.
Usage notes
[edit]Both "olfactic" and "olfactive" refer to the action of smelling, "olfaction". "Olfactic" refers more to the characteristic of the smell (that is, the smell coming off of the thing smelled); it concerns the product that is smelled. "Olfactive" refers more to the characteristic of the action of smelling; it focuses on the act or process of the smelling. Thus, "an olfactic description of a bouquet of flowers" is opposed to a visual description, whereas "the olfactive impairment of a cold" is the fact your ability to smell is inhibited.
References
[edit]- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “olfaction”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.