Sinicism

English

Etymology

From Sinic +‎ -ism.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsɪnɪsɪzəm/
  • Homophone: cynicism

Noun

Sinicism (plural Sinicisms)

  1. Chinese culture or custom
  2. A Chinese word or phrase that has entered another language

Coordinate terms

foreignismsedit
  • Akkadianism / Akkadism
  • Americanism
  • Amharism
  • Anglicism
  • Arabism
  • Aramaism
  • Armenism
  • Australianism
  • Batavism
  • Belorussianism
  • Bengalism
  • Briticism
  • Bulgarism
  • Catalanism
  • Church Slavicism / Church Slavonicism / Slavonicism
  • Croatism
  • Czechism / Bohemism / Bohemianism
  • Gallicism / Frenchism
  • Germanism / Teutonism
  • Grecism / Hellenism
  • Hebraism
  • Hispanism / Hispanicism / Castilianism
  • Hungarianism / Magyarism
  • Indianism
  • Iranianism
  • Irishism
  • Italianism / Italicism
  • Japanism
  • Kazakhism
  • Latinism
  • Macedonianism
  • Mandaism
  • Moravianism
  • New Zealandism
  • Persianism
  • Polonism
  • Portuguesism
  • Russianism
  • Scotticism
  • Serbism
  • Serbo-Croatism
  • Sinicism
  • Slavism
  • Slovenism / Pannonianism
  • Sumerianism / Sumerism
  • Syriacism
  • Turkism
  • Ukrainism / Ukrainianism
  • Uzbekism
  • Yiddishism

See also

  • wasei kango, Japanese Sinicisms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 unless otherwise noted. Additional terms may apply for the media files.