[1685–95; ‹ F dialecticien ‹ L dialectic(us) dialectic + F -ien-ian]This word is first recorded in the period 1685–95. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: align, blowhole, commodore, lens, sterilize-ian is a suffix occurring originally in adjectives borrowed from Latin, formed from nounsdenoting places (Italian) or persons (Flavian), and now productively forming English adjectives by extension of the Latin pattern.Attached to geographical names, it denotes provenance or membership (Washingtonian), the latter sense now extended to membership in social classes, religious denominations,etc. (Episcopalian; pedestrian). Attached to personal names, it has the additional senses “contemporary with” ( Victorian) or “proponent of” (Hegelian; Freudian) the person specified by the noun base. It also occurs in a set of personal nouns,mainly loanwords from French, denoting one who engages in, practices, or works withthe referent of the base noun (comedian; grammarian; theologian)
Examples of 'dialectician' in a sentence
dialectician
For you surely would not regard the skilled mathematician as a dialectician?
Plato, Translated by Benjamin Jowett The Republic (1871). Retrieved in 2019 from Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/)