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didact
[ dahy-dakt ]
noun
- a didactic person; one overinclined to instruct others.
yĐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of didact1
Example Sentences
Mungiu â a towering figure in the Romanian New Wave â is a tough, unsparing filmmaker, but he isnât a scold or didact, the kind who delivers grindingly obvious life lessons about the horrors of other people.
Yet Butler was neither a pessimist nor a didact.
On forums they commiserated about their âSquipsâ, a reference to the computerized man the drug makes manifest in Jeremyâs head as a didact of chillness.
Jamie says that her father was an ardent family man, attentive, affectionate, an unending didact who crammed his kids with poetry, music, Hebrew lessons.
âCole had always been understood as an untrained genius, a self-taught didact,â said Ms. Dunbar, owner of the company Historic Design in Lexington, Va. âBut considering his background, this training that gave him the basic tools he needed to start painting, itâs not surprising that he got involved in decorating his home. What is extremely revelatory about this is it shows how he integrated the two.â
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