memetic
See also: memètic
English
Etymology
From meme + -etic, by analogy with gene → genetic.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /məˈmɛtɪk/, /mɪˈmɛtɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Homophone: mimetic (some accents)
Adjective
memetic (comparative more memetic, superlative most memetic)
- Of, being, containing, or pertaining to memes; pertaining to replication of concepts.
- 2015 July 7, Mark Galeotti, “'The west is too paranoid about Russia's information war'”, in The Guardian[2]:
- But let’s not assume that all of the innuendo and debate is a product of the Russian info-war, or that the Kremlin is a grandmaster of the memetic chessboard.
- 2018, Whitney Phillips, Ryan M. Milner, The Ambivalent Internet […] , John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 122:
- Within different communities, groups, or dyads, the same memetic media could be deployed as a long-standing community in-joke, dadaist absurdity, or even as fighting words (or images, as the case may be).
- 2021, Lisa Nakamura, Hanah Stiverson, Kyle Lindsey, Racist Zoombombing[3], Routledge, →ISBN:
- Gamergate, “the Fappening” (or Celebgate), and the subsequent Comicsgate are examples of campaigns that deployed active memetic warfare in racialized and gendered ways to attack and drive away a constructed enemy.
Derived terms
- antimemetic
- memetical
- memetic algorithm
- memetically
- memetic computing
- memetic engineering
- memetic hazard
- memetic kill agent
- memetics
- memetic warfare