prosthetic
English
Etymology
From New Latin prostheticus, from Ancient Greek προσθετικός (prosthetikós, “adding; repletive; giving additional power”), from πρόσθεσις (prósthesis, “addition”), from προστίθημι (prostíthēmi, “I add”), from πρός (prós, “towards”) + τίθημι (títhēmi, “I place”).[1]
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˌpɹɑsˈθɛtɪk/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Adjective
prosthetic (not comparable)
- artificial, acting as a substitute for part of the body; relating to prosthesis
- prosthetic leg/arm
- 2010, Tyson E. Lewis, Richard Kahn, Education Out of Bounds, page 1:
- Opposite of natural monsters there are technological monsters such as terminators, cyborgs, and robocops—all of which undermine dichotomies between the artificial and the organic, the prosthetic and the natural.
- (linguistics) prothetic
Derived terms
Translations
artificial
|
(linguistics) prothetic — see prothetic
Noun
prosthetic (plural prosthetics)
- An artificial replacement for part of the body; a prosthesis, prosthetic device.
- An addition to an actor etc.'s body as part of a costume, intended to transform the person's appearance.
- 2003, Penny Delamar, The Complete Make-up Artist:
- The specialist makers of prosthetics are part chemist, part artist and part engineer. Each tends to specialise in a particular area, such as sculpting, mould making, foaming latex, knotting hair into the pieces, colouring or artworking.
Translations
prosthesis — see prosthesis
References
- ^ “prosthetic, adj. and n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.