ludic

ludic
lu·dic

English syllables. 2014.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • LUDIC — Pour les articles homonymes, voir ludique. Sommaire 1 la LUDI quoi? 2 Où, qui, comment 3 Sa mission …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Ludic — derives from Latin ludus, play. It means literally playful , and refers to any philosophy where play is the prime purpose of life. Ludic derives from the Latin and connotes anything that is fun. Topics to cover:*Homo Ludens *Ludic fallacy from… …   Wikipedia

  • ludic — LÚDIC, Ă, ludici, ce, adj. (livr.) Referitor la joc. – Din fr. ludique. Trimis de tavilis, 03.05.2008. Sursa: DEX 98  lúdic adj. m., pl. lúdici; f. sg. lúdică …   Dicționar Român

  • ludic — ☆ ludic [lo͞o′dik ] adj. [Fr ludique < L ludus: see LUDICROUS] expressive of a playful but aimless outlook [the ludic uses of rhyme] …   English World dictionary

  • ludic — spontaneously playful, 1940, from Fr. ludique, from L. ludere to play (see LUDICROUS (Cf. ludicrous)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • ludic — adjective Etymology: French ludique, from Latin ludus Date: 1940 of, relating to, or characterized by play ; playful < ludic behavior > < a ludic novel > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • ludic — ˈlüdik adjective Etymology: French ludique, from Latin ludus play + French ique ic (I) : of, relating to, or characterized by play : playful ludic behavior a ludic novel …   Useful english dictionary

  • ludic — /looh dik/, adj. playful in an aimless way: the ludic behavior of kittens. [1935 40; < L lud (s. of ludere to play) + IC, perh. via F ludique, learned formation from same components] * * * …   Universalium

  • ludic — lu•dic [[t]ˈlu dɪk[/t]] adj. cvb playful in an aimless way: the ludic behavior of kittens[/ex] • Etymology: 1935–40; < L lūd(ere) to play + ic (or < F ludique) …   From formal English to slang

  • Ludic Society — We sell play no games Desarrolladora(s) Ludic Society Distribuidora(s) Ludic Society Artista(s) …   Wikipedia Español

  • Ludic language — Ludic or Ludian or Ludic Karelian is a Baltic Finnic language in the Uralic language family. Some consider it a dialect of Karelian language or Veps language. It is spoken by 3,000 people in the Republic of Karelia, near the northeastern shore of …   Wikipedia

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