Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHilfe-CenterKontakt
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Hilfe-Center, Versionshinweise, Download

Mac + Safari

Hilfe-Center, Versionshinweise, Download

Google Chrome

Hilfe-Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Hilfe-Center, Download

Opera

Hilfe-Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Hilfe-Center, Download
Kundendienst
DownloadHilfe-CenterUnterstützte SprachenEine Rückerstattung beantragenPasswort zurücksetzenLizenzschlüssel wiederherstellenDatenschutzrichtlinie
AUF DEM LAUFENDEN BLEIBEN
KontaktTwitterBlog
SPRACHE
Kostenlose Dienste
Web-ÜbersetzerVerb-KonjugatorDer Die Das nachschlagenUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms
Mate logo
Home
Apps
MacMac + SafariiOSiPhone + iPadChromeGoogle ChromeFirefoxMozilla FirefoxOperaOperaEdgeMicrosoft Edge
BlogHilfe-CenterKontakt
Apps

iPhone + iPad

Hilfe-Center, Versionshinweise, Download

Mac + Safari

Hilfe-Center, Versionshinweise, Download

Google Chrome

Hilfe-Center, Download

Mozilla Firefox

Hilfe-Center, Download

Opera

Hilfe-Center, Download

Microsoft Edge

Hilfe-Center, Download
Kundendienst
DownloadHilfe-CenterUnterstützte SprachenEine Rückerstattung beantragenPasswort zurücksetzenLizenzschlüssel wiederherstellenDatenschutzrichtlinie
AUF DEM LAUFENDEN BLEIBEN
KontaktTwitterBlog
SPRACHE
Kostenlose Dienste
Web-ÜbersetzerVerb-KonjugatorDer Die Das nachschlagenUsage examplesWordsDefinitionIdioms

Definition of "odic" in Englisch

adjective

  1. Of or pertaining to odes.

    • 1964, Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin, Vladimir Nabokov (translator and author of comments), Eugene Onegin: A Novel in Verse: Commentary, Both the French odic stanza and the EO stanza are related to the sonnet.

adjective

  1. (pseudoscience, historical) Synonym of odylic (“of or pertaining to the od or odyle (“a hypothetical force or natural power, now proved not to exist, which was supposed by Carl Reichenbach and others to inhere in certain people and produce phenomena such as animal magnetism and mesmerism, and to be developed by various agencies, as by chemical or vital action, heat, light, magnets, etc.”)”)

    • Such was the origin of the delusions of "animal magnetism," and "odic" and "psychic" force—claims that belong to cerebro-physiology, a department of science that is now but just passing out of the territorial into the organized stage.