proleptically
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From proleptic + -ally or proleptical + -ly.
Adverb
[edit]proleptically (comparative more proleptically, superlative most proleptically)
- In a proleptic manner; anticipatorily.
- 1925, John Dewey. Experience and Nature In The Later Works of John Dewey, Vol. 1, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale (IL), p. 150:
- When we name an event, calling it fire, we speak proleptically; we do not name an immediate event; that is impossible. We employ a term of discourse; we invoke a meaning, namely, the potential consequence of the existence.
- 2001, Mark Allan Powell, Chasing the Eastern Star, page 18:
- The ultimacy of God's eschatological revelation impinges proleptically on . . . and, then, it all gets over my head.
- 2021 July 28, Jesse Green, “Onstage, the Pen Is Usually Duller Than the Sword”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- Fullerton, in real life apparently a magnetic, equal opportunity Lothario […] is written here […] as more of a puppy than a hound, making campy references to Wharton by her childhood name, Pussy Jones, and proleptically quoting Mae West.
- 1925, John Dewey. Experience and Nature In The Later Works of John Dewey, Vol. 1, Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale (IL), p. 150: