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View synonyms for didactic

didactic

[ dahy-dak-tik ]

adjective

  1. intended for instruction; instructive:

    didactic poetry.

  2. inclined to teach or lecture others too much:

    a boring, didactic speaker.

    Synonyms: pedagogical, donnish, preachy, pedantic

  3. teaching or intending to teach a moral lesson.
  4. didactics, (used with a singular verb) the art or science of teaching.


didactic

/ dɪˈdæktɪk /

adjective

  1. intended to instruct, esp excessively
  2. morally instructive; improving
  3. (of works of art or literature) containing a political or moral message to which aesthetic considerations are subordinated


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Derived Forms

  • diˈdacticism, noun
  • diˈdactically, adverb

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Other Words From

  • di·dacti·cal·ly adverb
  • di·dacti·cism noun
  • nondi·dactic adjective
  • nondi·dacti·cal·ly adverb
  • undi·dactic adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of didactic1

First recorded in 1635–45; from Greek didaktikós “apt at teaching, instructive,” from didakt(ós) “that may be taught, teachable” (from didáskein “to teach”) + -ikos -ic

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Word History and Origins

Origin of didactic1

C17: from Greek didaktikos skilled in teaching, from didaskein to teach

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Example Sentences

So she has chosen the path as her literary heroes, Charles Dickens and George Orwell: the entertaining but didactic novel.

Many schools seem to include both didactic sessions and practice sessions with simulated patients.

Will the next few hours be both didactic and entertaining, providing us with ample high and lowbrow cocktail party fodder?

A footnote toward the end of the book gives a short, wonderful history of human adornment, but the discussion remains didactic.

Your father hated didactic writings, hence this book had to be extremely playful ... I had to imagine him.

His plays are essentially didactic, being aimed at some weakness or iniquity of the social system.

In didactic poetry Lucretius was pre-eminent, and is regarded by Schlegel as the first of Roman poets in native genius.

This discussion is necessarily didactic and assertive for it is impossible to prove or disprove any of these postulates.

Some, as that of Sidi-Yusef-Hansali, are mild in their rites and of a purely didactic or religious nature.

With him the last spark of the didactic ideals of the Haskala has entirely vanished.

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didactdidactics