| 单词 | socio- | 
| 释义 | socio-comb. formΚΠ 1656    H. Seaman Second ed. New Almanack, or Nocturnall Revised 7  				His socio-forger.  2.   Forming nouns and adjectives with the sense ‘with reference to society, socially’.See also sociology n., sociometry n., etc.   sociocentric adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > 			[adjective]		 > tending to focus one's interest inwards sociocentric1881 1881    L. F. Ward in  Trans. Anthrop. Soc. Washington 		(1882)	 1 97  				Those in consequence of which social progress tends to defeat itself—anti-sociocentric facts. 1970    J. D. Caute Fanon iv. 49  				There was the Fanon who condemned such insularity as egocentric and sociocentric. 2007    Lancet 		(Nexis)	 370 1109  				Most migration occurs from poor, generally sociocentric (ie, collectivist) cultures to those that are richer and egocentric (ie, individualist).   sociocentrism n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > 			[noun]		 > social group > tendency to focus one's interest inwardly sociocentrism1903 1903    Folk-lore 14 433  				We are now in a position to state more precisely in what anthropocentrism, better called sociocentrism, consists. 1947    G. Murphy Personality xv. 386  				Side by side with egocentrism there was sociocentrism. 1995    B. L. Omdahl Cognitive Appraisal ii. 34  				Children develop social skills gradually and..they do not suddenly and dramatically shift from egocentrism to sociocentrism.   sociodynamic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > 			[adjective]		 > forces causing change sociodynamic1934 mobilized1953 1934    J. L. Moreno Who shall Survive? vii. 74  				This demonstrates what we may call the process of slowing down of interest, the cooling off of emotional expansiveness, the sociodynamic decline of interest. 1977    R. Holland Self & Social Context vii. 221  				The hypothesis that there are psychodynamic and sociodynamic processes at work even in this relatively ‘self-conscious’ area of knowledge production. 2002    H. Cohen in  R. A. Straus Using Sociol. 		(ed. 3)	 x. 319  				Someone's actions influence our desire to interact in a sociodynamic field.   sociodynamics n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > customs, values, and civilization > 			[noun]		 > change > forces producing social dynamics1843 sociodynamics1917 1917    Jrnl. Polit. Econ. 25 29  				I do not find my students sufficiently familiar with the concrete facts of economical life to make much..out of..the abstractions of theoretical socio-dynamics, such as pecuniary motivation. 1973    Contemp. Sociol. 2 506/1  				A projective technique designed to explore sociodynamics of settings rather than psychodynamics of individuals. 2004    M. McCartney  & D. H. Glass in  Z. R. Yang et al.  Intelligent Data Engin. 820  				Sociodynamics..aims to provide quantitative models for how social groups evolve in a range of contexts.   socioecologic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > study > 			[adjective]		 > ecology ecological1879 bionomic1890 bionomical1890 ecologic1894 synecological1906 autecological1926 socioecological1936 ecogeographic1951 radioecological1952 socioecologic1970 1970    Science 7 Aug. 529/2  				Ugly cities, degraded countrysides,..and increasing human degradation reflect years of neglect for the basic health of our socioecologic environment. 1972    Biol. Abstr. 54 6370/2  				Geographic vegetational zones are given, as are vegetational stages. Socioecologic groups are described. 2001    T. G. Pickering in  M. A. Weber Hypertension Med. vi. 64  				The effects of socioecologic stress in African Americans.   socioecological adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > study > 			[adjective]		 > ecology ecological1879 bionomic1890 bionomical1890 ecologic1894 synecological1906 autecological1926 socioecological1936 ecogeographic1951 radioecological1952 socioecologic1970 1936    Social Forces 15 43/1  				All of these aspects of the physical structure and layout of a region are obviously basic, and have immediate socio-ecological bearings as well. 1973    W. P. J. Dittus in  R. H. Tuttle Socioecol. & Psychol. Primates 149  				Its net reproductive rate is attuned to the availability of food, and is regulated through socioecological mechanisms. 1994    Environments Summer 61/1  				One of the planet's most sorrowful spectacles of systemic suffering and socioecological slaughter.   socioecology  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > study > 			[noun]		 > ecology ecology1875 hexiology1880 bionomics1888 human ecology1907 autecology1910 synecology1910 bioecology1923 genecology1923 socioecology1952 radioecology1956 deep ecology1972 1952    Auk 69 190  				A whole socio-ecology which includes our own species. 1975    L. L.  & D. J. Klein in  R. H. Tuttle Socioecol. & Psychol. Primates 83  				A dietary factor..that is generally over looked in discussion of primate socioecology, was the degree to which specific primates are able to utilize..varied substances in any single day. 2003    P. Jordan Material Culture & Sacred Landscape i. 4  				Socioecology examines the consequences when certain patterns of behaviour are played out against other strategies.   sociogenic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > 			[adjective]		 > originating in sociogenic1936 sociogenous1941 1936    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 1 239  				Psychogenic illness is therefore in some degree sociogenic. 1969    Zigler  & Child in  G. Lindzey  & E. Aronson Handbk. Social Psychol. III. xxiv. 484  				Two main types of interpretations have been employed to explain the cross-cultural findings, the sociogenic and the psychogenic. 2000    Augusta 		(Georgia)	 Chron. 		(Nexis)	 20 Apr.  c2  				Many historians think sociogenic illness led to the Salem witch hunts.   sociogenous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > 			[adjective]		 > originating in sociogenic1936 sociogenous1941 1941    W. Dennis in  Genetic Psychol. Monographs 23 187  				Prior to the second year of life sociogenous responses, those which are learned through the intercession of other persons, are few.   sociogeny  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > 			[noun]		 > origin and development of social evolution1853 sociogeny1875 1875    Atlantic Monthly May 618/2  				Nor does the deficiency in the working value of the Cosmic laws of sociogeny appear to be supplied by the statement that the controlling tendency of society is toward increasing individuation. 1927    Social Forces 6 194/1  				The three levels of aggregation are cosmogeny, biogeny and sociogeny. 1967    C. L. Markmann tr.  F. Fanon Black Skin, White Masks 		(1968)	 13  				It will be seen that the black man's alienation is not an individual question. Besides phylogeny and ontogeny stands sociogeny. 2006    S. Sullivan Revealing Whiteness iv. 108  				Fanon understands that racism and colonialism must be approached in terms of the transactional relationship between specific environments, psyches, and bodies. This is why racism and colonialism are matters of sociogeny.   sociogram  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > study of society > 			[noun]		 > sociometry > diagram sociogram1933 1933    J. L. Moreno in  Proc. Amer. Assoc. Mental Deficiency 236  				To visualize how each individual is affected by the maze of attractions and repulsions coming from any individual or going out from any individual of a group we mapped these relations graphically into a sociogram. 1969    Man 4 86  				By recording the frequency of such units in social interaction between each pair of animals it was possible to draw up a sociogram of relationships between individuals. 2003    German Q. 76 261/2  				The Neukölln section [of the novel] is a sociogram of a population of different age groups and occupations. 2005    R. S. Burt Brokerage & Closure i. 29  				Figure 1.3 is a sociogram of the network data. Each dot represents one of the 480 managers active in the discussion network.   sociographic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > study of society > 			[adjective]		 > theories or methods of analysis functional1884 Webbite1890 neo-critical1894 structural-functional1898 Tolstoyan1898 functionalist1907 Webbian1913 Paretian1916 situational1916 Paretan1932 verstehende1933 reflexive1934 same-level1934 sociographic1934 idealistic1937 ideational1937 Parsonian1945 social Darwinist1945 culturalist1948 structural1948 contextualized1951 metasociological1953 structural functionalist1953 meta-sociologistic1964 Lévi-Straussian1967 postcolonial1970 decontextualized1971 cliometric1974 postcolonialist1981 intersectional1989 1934    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 39 580  				A historic review of the sociographic survey method is appended. 1954    Encounter Dec. 55/1  				A sociographic study attempts to relate all the data concerning a given locality in a meaningful way. 2000    P. A. Mellor in  A. Hastings et al.  Oxf. Compan. Christian Thought 679/2  				The strong sociographic tradition among Catholic sociologists in America continues the French pattern to a large extent.   sociography  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > study of society > 			[noun]		 > theories or methods of analysis reflexivity1662 social statics1843 social causation1848 sociography1881 functionalism1904 class analysis1919 culturalism1919 mass observation1920 survey1927 participant observation1933 participant observing1933 Verstehen1934 panel technique1938 MO1939 ahistoricism1940 historicism1940 technologism1940 action research1945 metasociology1950 pattern variable1951 structural functionalism1951 structuralism1951 panel analysis1955 cliometrics1960 unilinearism1964 technology assessment1966 symbolic interactionism1969 modernization theory1972 processualism1972 postcolonialism1974 decontextualization1976 decontextualizing1980 structurism1989 1881    O. T. Mason in  Ann. Rep. Smithsonian Inst. 		(1883)	 501  				Observing and descriptive stage..sociography. 1940    C. P. Loomis tr.  F. J. Tönnies Fund. Concepts Sociol. p. xxiv, 		(heading)	  				Empirical sociology or sociography. 1966    Listener 12 May 677/1  				We do not yet have a sociography of English Catholicism. 2003    I. F. McNeely Emancipation of Writing 7  				Here we see that sociography may be practiced through painstakingly precise reconstruction of social bonds.   sociogroup  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > 			[noun]		 > social group social group1831 group1845 sociogroup1947 1947    Sociometry 10 48  				Cliques are..often found to be of this formation—lacking motivation or skill for enjoying sociogroup membership. 1956    J. Klein Study of Groups 179  				In sociometric theory a sociogroup is based on preferences involving work in the group. 2000    J.-J. Blanc in  T. Ecimovic et al.  Local Agenda 21 iii. 199  				Managing interactions within a sociogroup.   sociolatry  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > society and the community > social attitudes > philanthropy > 			[noun]		 > social service or work human service1708 social service1795 social work1847 sociolatry1854 welfare work1903 1854    Methodist Q. Rev. July 339  				In the larger acceptation of these terms, M. Comte considers them as embracing the whole system of Positivism,..the Sociolatry regulating all the sentiments of the heart. 1944    Philos. & Phenomenol. Res. 4 557  				[Tobías Barreto]..was suspicious of the ‘sociolatry’ and ‘sociomania’ of sociology. 2000    J. J. Cohen Major Philosophers of Jewish Prayer iv. 61  				His attempt to place religion in its social context has led several critics to accuse him of sociolatry.   sociophagous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1892    H. Spencer Princ. Ethics I. §192. 472  				In sociophagous nations like ours, not much pleasure is caused by contemplating the cessation of conquests.   sociostatic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1895    Atlantic Monthly Feb. 195  				In a society where the socio~static press is always at work. 1944    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 49 440/2  				The principal reason why we have so largely failed to deal intelligently with resource use and control, with sociostatic pressures, and man-resource ratios, arises from our practice of leaving our human geography to the whims of history. 2004    J. H. Schumann et al.  Neurobiol. of Learning ii. 24  				We can distinguish between three types of value: homeostatic, sociostatic, and somatic.   sociotechnic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1923    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 29 1  				For this purpose he has created a socio-technic environment. 1931    ‘D. Stiff’ Milk & Honey Route vi. 62  				Should the sociotechnic social worker be convinced that you are not normal she will have you bound for a nuttery before sunset. 1962    Amer. Antiq. 28 223/2  				The presence of copper tools of essentially nonutilitarian form..are most certainly explicable in terms of their socio-technic functions within much more complex social systems. 1991    L. A. Conrad in  T. E. Emerson  & R. B. Lewis Cahokia & Hinterlands vi. 119/2  				None of the burials had an abundance of furniture and the items found are not sociotechnic in nature. 1991    Econ. Jrnl. 101 1581  				The ‘sociotechnic’ models of governmental deployment of the social sciences.   sociotechnical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1920    Jrnl. Polit. Econ. 28 768  				Throughout, the report maintains the view that socialization must be carried out as a socio-technical necessity. 1937    Burlington Mag. Nov. 246/1  				The concreteness with which socio-technical problems are realized. 1996    A. Podgórecki in  A. Podgórecki et al.  Social Engin. i. 29  				His research deals with the use of law as an instrument of sociotechnical activity. 2002    A. Feenberg Transforming Technol. 		(rev. ed.)	 i. 6  				It appears to account for the tensions between tradition, ideology, and efficiency that arise from sociotechnical change.   sociotechnics n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1926    Jrnl. Philos. 23 523  				In general the whole modern civilization based upon technics (enlarged to include bio-technics, socio-technics, psycho-technics and culturo-technics) is surely upsetting the traditional causality with its doctrine of occult or inherent characters and functions. 1976    A. Cherns Sociotechnics p. ix  				Sociotechnics..is..a quest for a methodology of bringing the knowledge and concepts of the social sciences to bear on human and social issues. 2003    World News Connection 		(Nexis)	 30 June  				There must be more values, more responsibility and consistency and less sociotechnics, the president said.  3.   Forming adjectives with the sense ‘social and——’, and forming adverbs with the sense ‘socially and ——’.   socio-critical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1940    R. S. Stites Arts & Man xvii. 691 		(heading)	  				The Socio-critical Essays of Ruskin and Morris. 2007    Gazette 		(Montreal)	 		(Nexis)	 15 Nov.  d1  				Garza's voice is a low rasp, from which he weaves professions of love, spiritual ruminations, socio-critical and political commentary.   socio-cultural adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1926    U. G. Weatherly Social Progress  iii. xii. 184  				Enrichment and multiplication of loyalties may then be taken as another measure of socio-cultural progress. 2006    Guardian 		(Nexis)	 6 June 10  				There are discriminatory aspects to some questions, in terms of socio-cultural bias and language usage.   socio-culturally adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1946    Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. 36 619/2  				The present survey deals with the Hsi Liao empire, first chronologically..and then socio-culturally. 2002    M. Jackson  & J. Colwell Teacher's Handbk. Death v. 61  				The proportion of suicidally prone personalities appears to be socio-culturally determined and not fixed.   socio-demographic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1940    Social Forces 19 202/2  				Suggestions for possible socio-demographic research projects will therefore probably always be in order. 2000    C. Brunsdon Feminist, Housewife & Soap Opera  i. i. 32  				Ang and Hermes make a radical critique of the use of socio-demographic variables such as class and gender in the interpretation of audience data.   socio-educational adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1887    Century Dec. 318/2  				There is no doubt in my mind that..a more general, more zealous, wiser cultivation of choral music is the greatest of the socio-educational needs of the United States. 1961    Times 16 Sept. 9/3  				There is here an old socio-educational dispute in a new context. 2005    C. B. Hutchison Teaching in Amer. vi. 213  				A Latino..student who identifies more with middle class America will have different socio-educational issues from another Latino student who identifies more with the lower class.   socio-emotional adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1930    Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 40 508  				Again the centrality in our thought-life of socio-emotional motivations revealed especially by psychoanalysis, is here to be recalled. 1996    M. F. Davies in  A. P. Hare et al.  Small Groups i. 14  				In the rectangular arrangement, leaders spent more time on task activities, whereas in the circular arrangement, leaders spent more time on socio-emotional activities.   socio-environmental adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1936    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 1 414  				The socio-environmental factors in shaping the psychic abnormalities said to be inherited have not been investigated. 2003    N. J. Jacobs Environment, Power, & Injustice i. 1  				This book returns to Kuruman to construct its socio-environmental history.   socio-geographic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1928    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 34 583  				Three socio-geographic laws of opposition and combination are named. 1993    C. Obbo in  S. M. James  & A. P. A. Busia Theorizing Black Feminisms xi. 171  				Sociogeographic networks have been documented by recent studies in New York.   socio-geographical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1934    Social Forces 13 256/1  				A period of delay between the appearance of the socio-geographical factor and its reflection seems natural when one stops to analyze it in a community which is so closely dependent upon a single resource. 2002    Guardian 17 July  i. 21/3  				Round here a ‘henry’ is a 50/50 mix of orange juice and lemonade, but ask for one in Bristol and they won't know what you're talking about. Cue for other socio-geographical trivia.   socio-historical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1900    Atlantic Monthly Dec. 812/2  				The human life to which we seek to adapt the child..is preëminently socio-historical—lived in society, determined by the historical order. 2000    J. H. McWhorter Missing Spanish Creoles v. 165  				No matter how thoroughly mined, the sociohistorical record of an early plantation society is equivalent to a torn, stained photograph.   socio-industrial adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1874    Galaxy Oct. 565/1  				Such great socio-industrial movements as the formation of guilds in former times. 1909    W. H. Tolman Social Engineering xii. 366  				A new profession necessitated by the complexity of socio-industrial relations. 2006    Dominion Post 		(Wellington, N.Z.)	 		(Nexis)	 19 June 7  				Mr Maunsell's success as a manufacturer allowed him to apply a number of his socio-industrial visions, one of which was the park-like estate of the Hansells factory itself.   socio-legal adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1900    Chicago Tribune 2 Mar. 8/5  				The Socio-Legal Forum..formed for the purpose of promoting scientific methods for the prevention and correction of crime. 1952    J. Hall Theft, Law & Society 		(ed. 2)	 p. v  				To concentrate upon a specific socio-legal problem in the field of crime. 2005    Polit. Res. Q. 58 637/2  				I am to contribute to the socio-legal literature on voting.   socio-literary adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1834    Leigh Hunt's London Jrnl. Sept. 194/1  				We say ‘unfortunately’ in a socio-literary sense. 1933    A. Parry Garrets & Pretenders p. ix  				Since Bohemianism is pre-eminently a socio-literary phenomenon, the periods of its rise and decay coincided fairly well throughout the world. 2000    Transition No. 80. 89/2  				At one time in the volatile attention of socioliterary criticism there was much discussion of Ernest Hemingway's decisions in writing direct speech as translation from another language.   sociomedical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ society > 			[adjective]		 > specific sociomedical1876 socio-economic1883 psychosocial1890 biosocial1893 socio-economical1893 socionomic1901 the world > health and disease > healing > art or science of medicine > 			[adjective]		 > socio-medical sociomedical1876 1876    Lancet 17 June 891/1  				It is not alone that crying abuses have been remedied, the baneful prejudices which, until comparatively recent times, brooded over the whole subject of mental disease and its victims have been uprooted, and the entire system of socio-medical treatment reformed. 1977    Time 10 Jan. 41/1  				The flourishing condom market is only one sign of a growing sociomedical phenomenon in the U.S.: a back-to-basics movement in birth control. 1999    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 7 Oct. 19/2  				Making the Body Beautiful is a broader-based, less overtly academic work, written with some of the breeziness of Roy Porter's energetic sociomedical overviews.   socio-official adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1891    R. Kipling City Dreadful Night 86  				They are spared all socio-official worry. 1987    D. Vital Zionism: Crucial Phase  iv. ix. 346  				Lévi was unusual among those Jews who had achieved a place of high distinction in the French socio-official hierarchy.   socio-political adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1835    Brit. Critic 17 496  				We must reiterate..the general caution which we gave, as to the propriety, or utility, on the part of clergymen, of attending socio-political festivities. 1884    Pall Mall Gaz. 16 Feb. 2/1  				The political or socio-political questions of the day. 1963    F. C. Crews Pooh Perplex 17  				The only way to make an accurate prediction, I submit, is to analyze Milne's writings and bring to light their hidden socio-political implications. 2005    I. Jack in  Granta Summer 7  				It seems an odd thing for me to be, almost traitorous, in the context of my socio-political stratum in British society.   socio-politically adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1919    E. Paul  & C. Paul tr.  T. G. Masaryk Spirit of Russ. II.  xviii. iii. 320  				Practically and socio-politically, just as much as theoretically, Marxism abandons its positions. 2006    Hindustan Times 		(Nexis)	 27 Oct.  				Double-digit growth figures mean nothing if the benefits remain limited to the already affluent—this is economically unsustainable, socio-politically dangerous, and morally unacceptable.   socio-psychiatric adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1924    Mental Hygiene 		(U.S. National Comm. for Mental Hygiene)	 8 453 		(title)	  				Socio-psychiatric Delinquency Studies from the Psychopathic Clinic of the Recorder's Court, Detroit. 2003    Jrnl. Health & Social Behaviour 44 241/1  				The hospital occupied a unique position as a provider in a full range of socio-psychiatric services.   socio-psychological adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1899    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 4 661  				Such a theory can be developed only along socio-psychological lines. 1970    Nature 19 Dec. 1136/1  				Too little work has been done on the socio-psychological aspects of spaceflight. 1999    J. Munby Public Enemies, Public Heroes vi. 179  				These films' impact lay in their dramatization of the sociopsychological disintegration of everyday life.   socio-psychologically adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1912    M. Booth tr.  R. Eucken Main Currents Mod. Thought 352  				Science endeavours to study man, not as an isolated individual, but ‘socio-psychologically’, from the point of view of society as a whole. 2000    R. T. Lakoff Lang. War iv. 126  				For one thing..her side was sociopsychologically less defensible.   socio-regional adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1964    M. A. K. Halliday et al.  Ling. Sci. iv. 86  				Our dialects and accents are no longer simply regional: they are regional and social, or ‘socio-regional’. 2001    N. Armstrong Social & Stylistic Variation in Spoken French ii. 44  				One of the factors frequently cited as influential in promoting the salience of the regional component of UK English socio-regional accents is the role of the broadcast media in raising the general consciousness of certain accents.   socio-religious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1858    W. Clarkson Christ & Missions vii. 198  				We are accustomed to resolve the non-acceptance of Christianity by the Hindus into the socio-religious institute of caste. 1971    B. Sidran Black Talk i. 17  				Black music became..a kind of popular religion.., retaining the important socioreligious properties that had been developed during the earliest neo-Christian rituals. 2000    Church Times 14 Apr. 5/3  				Other models might be considered instead which allow the development of a new ‘socio-religious contract’ reflecting greater equity, inclusivity and participation.   socio-scientific adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1891    Nation 3 Sept. 182  				The current socio-scientific use of environment is first found in Carlyle (1827). 1967    Jrnl. Higher Educ. 38 48  				We must extend our academic concern beyond aid in science and technology in order to exert an equal academic influence on the humanistic and socio-scientific fields. 2005    Financial Times 		(Nexis)	 16 July 15  				‘Brain-Sex’, the first film in a three-part exercise that tries to get to the heart of the socio-scientific differences between men and women, is very much better than it could have been.   socio-sexual adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1904    G. F. Lydston Dis. of Society iii. 82  				Certain breaches of socio-sexual ethics, such as adultery and seduction, are classified in most States as crimes. 1968    Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 114 1192/1  				The core of the discussion..is how far differences in social behaviour and intellectual functioning between the sexes can be accounted for by hormonal factors and what part is played by the intense socio-sexual conditioning experienced by most children in our society from the moment of birth. 2003    Gay Times Feb. 87/1  				He is sententious and derisory,..examining his socio-sexual machinations much as David Attenborough might view the mating rituals of the blue-footed booby. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, September 2009; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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