scholium

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From New Latin, from Ancient Greek σχόλιον (skhólion, comment), from σχολή (skholḗ, discussion).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: skōʹlĭəm, IPA(key): /ˈskəʊlɪəm/
  • Homophone: scolium

Noun

scholium (plural scholia or scholiums)

  1. (linguistics) A note added to a text as an explanation, criticism or commentary.
    • 1535, Joye, Apol. Tindale (Arb.), page 23:
      And when I shulde make scholias, notis, and gloses in the margent as himself and his master doith.
    • 1660, Heylin, Hist. Quinquart., book ii, page 42:
      Mr. Fox was fain to make soom Scholia’s on it, to reconcile a gloss like that of Orleance, which corrupts the Text.
    • 1760–2, Goldsm., Cit. W., chapter cxiii:
      Almost every word admits a scholium, and a long one too.
    • 1799, Monthly Rev., volume XXX, page 136:
      Short Scholia are added to almost every chapter, containing various readings, or various translations, selected with much judgment and critical acumen.
    • 1866, G. Macdonald, Ann. Q. Neighb., chapter ix:
      Judy, however, did not choose to receive the laugh as a scholium explanatory of the remark.
    • 1904, R. C. Jebb, Bacchylides (Proc. Brit. Acad.), page 9:
      From a scholium on the Iliad (24. 496) we know that Bacchylides spoke of Theano as having borne fifty sons to Antenor.
    • 2000, Mary Depew, Dirk Obbink, Matrices of Genre: Authors, Canons, and Society, Harvard University Press, →ISBN, page 10, →ISBN:
      Sluiter examines a tension inherent in such scholarly works as lexica, scholia, epitomai, and commentaries: although the very titles of these works claim no more than secondary status, their authors engage nonetheless in a rhetoric of self-legitimation.
  2. (mathematics) A note added to a proof as amplification.
    • 1704, J. Harris, Lex. Techn., volume I:
      Scholium, is a remark made leisurely, and as it were by the by, on that Proposition, Subject or Discourse before advanced, treated of, or delivered.
    • 1715, anonymous translator, Gregory’s Astron., volume I, published 1726, page 23:
      Which is evident likewise concerning the Orbits of Mars, Jupiter and Saturn, from the Scholium to Prop. 9.
    • 1741, Watts, Improv. Mind, book i, chapter xiv:
      Some…cast all their…metaphysical and…moral learning into the method of mathematicians, and bring every thing relating to those abstracted or those practical sciences under theorems, problems, postulates, scholiums, corollaries, &c.
    • 1824–5, Barlow, in Encycl. Metrop., volume I, page 314/2:
      A scholium is a remark applied to some preceding propositions, in order to point out their relative connection, or general utility and application.
  3. A “copy-book maxim”, trite saying.
    • 1830, Marryat, King’s Own, chapter xix:
      The old scholium, that ‘too much familiarity breeds contempt’.

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