practic

A person concerned with action or practice, as opposed to one concerned with theory.

Adjective

  1. Practical.
    • They that intend the practic cure of melancholy, saith Duretus in his notes to Hollerius, set down nine peculiar scopes or ends […]. - , II.i.4.3
  2. Cunning, crafty.
    • she vsed hath the practicke paine / Of this false footman [...]. - 1590, Edmund Spenser, “Book I, Canto XII”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, →OCLC:

Origin

From Middle English practic, practik, partly from Old French practique and partly from its etymon, Late Latin prācticus (“active”), from Ancient Greek πρακτικός (praktikós, “of or pertaining to action, concerned with action or business, active, practical”), from πράσσω (prássō, “to do”). Doublet of practico.

Forms

more practic most practic

Related

practise

Derived

practical

Noun

  1. A person concerned with action or practice, as opposed to one concerned with theory.

Forms

practics

Derived

chiropractic