Word Study
Gnomic
CIDE DICTIONARY
Gnomic, a. [Gr. , fr. : cf. F. gnomique. See Gnome maxim.].
Sententious; uttering or containing maxims, or striking detached thoughts; aphoristic. [1913 Webster]
"A city long famous as the seat of elegiac and gnomic poetry." [1913 Webster]
OXFORD DICTIONARY
Gnomic, adj.
1 of, consisting of, or using gnomes or aphorisms; sententious (see GNOME(2)).
2 Gram. (of a tense) used without the implication of time to express a general truth, e.g. men were deceivers ever.
1 of, consisting of, or using gnomes or aphorisms; sententious (see GNOME(2)).
2 Gram. (of a tense) used without the implication of time to express a general truth, e.g. men were deceivers ever.
Derivative
gnomically adv.
Etymology
Gk gnomikos (as GNOME(2))
THESAURUS
Gnomic
Spartan, abbreviated, abridged, aphoristic, aposiopestic, axiomatic, brief, brusque, clipped, close, compact, compendious, compressed, concise, condensed, contracted, crisp, curt, cut, docked, elliptic, epigrammatic, formulaic, formulistic, laconic, pithy, platitudinous, pointed, proverbial, pruned, pungent, reserved, sententious, short, short and sweet, shortened, succinct, summary, synopsized, taciturn, terse, tight, to the point, truncatedROGET THESAURUS
Gnomic
Maxim
N maxim, aphorism, apothegm, apophthegm, dictum, saying, adage, saw, proverb, sentence, mot, motto, word, byword, moral, phylactery, protasis, axiom, theorem, scholium, truism, postulate, first principles, a priori fact, assumption (supposition), reflection, conclusion, golden rule, principle, principia, profession of faith, settled principle, accepted principle, formula, accepted fact, received truth, wise maxim, sage maxim, received maxim, admitted maxim, recognized maxim, true saying, common saying, hackneyed saying, trite saying, commonplace saying, aphoristic, proverbial, phylacteric, axiomatic, gnomic, as the saying goes, as the saying is, as they say.For further exploring for "Gnomic" in Webster Dictionary Online