thesis
Reikšmė (English)
- Senses relating to logic, rhetoric, etc.
- Senses relating to logic, rhetoric, etc.
- Senses relating to logic, rhetoric, etc.
- Senses relating to logic, rhetoric, etc.
- Senses relating to logic, rhetoric, etc.
- Senses relating to music and prosody.
- Senses relating to music and prosody.
Synonyms
literary composition
doctoral dissertation
object matter
contention issue
final paper
diploma thesis
Dažnis
Brūkšneliu surašyta kaip
the‧sis
Tariamas kaip (IPA)
/ˈθiːsɪs/
Etimologija (English)
In summary
From Late Middle English thesis (“lowering of the voice”) and also borrowed directly from its etymon Latin thesis (“proposition, thesis; lowering of the voice”), from Ancient Greek θέσῐς (thésis, “arrangement, placement, setting; conclusion, position, thesis; lowering of the voice”), from τῐ́θημῐ (títhēmi, “to place, put, set; to put down in writing; to consider as, regard”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dʰeh₁- (“to do; to place, put”)) + -σῐς (-sis, suffix forming abstract nouns or nouns of action, process, or result). The English word is a doublet of deed. Sense 1.1 (“proposition or statement supported by arguments”) is adopted from antithesis. Sense 1.4 (“initial stage of reasoning”) was first used by the German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814), and later applied to the dialectical method of his countryman, the philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831). The plural form theses is borrowed from Latin thesēs, from Ancient Greek θέσεις (théseis).
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Notes