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What is the noun for dialectician?

What's the noun for dialectician? Here's the word you're looking for.

dialect
  1. (linguistics) A variety of a language (specifically, often a spoken variety) that is characteristic of a particular area, community or group, often with relatively minor differences in vocabulary, style, spelling and pronunciation.
  2. A dialect of a language perceived as substandard or wrong.
  3. A regional or minority language.
  4. (computing) A variant of a non-standardized programming language.
  5. Synonyms:
  6. Examples:
    1. “Many linguistic sources about the Slavic languages describe Silesian as a dialect of Polish.”
      “Grammars of Old French are without exception based on the Francien dialect.”
      “The soul of dialect is cacography, the deliberate misspelling of words for comic effect, which is the written equivalent of the malapropism.”
dialectic
  1. Any formal system of reasoning that arrives at a truth by the exchange of logical arguments.
  2. A contradiction of ideas that serves as the determining factor in their interaction.
  3. (Marxism) a progress of conflict, especially class conflict
  4. Synonyms:
  5. Examples:
    1. “That is to say, we want to carve out a place for conversation, dialogue, dialectic, and debate.”
      “But in Berio, it is an element that generally functions within a complex dialectic.”
dialectics
  1. A systematic method of argument that attempts to resolve the contradictions in opposing views or ideas.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The struggle of the Afro-Americans for the right and the opportunity to assess their ancestral cultures had its own dialectics.”
      “The problem with these views is firstly that it is not clear in what sense dialectics is a logic.”
      “There are other expositions of the theory of dialectics which present it in opposition to formal logic.”
dialectometry
  1. (linguistics) The study of the regional distribution of dialects.
  2. Synonyms:
dialectism
  1. A word or phrase found in a particular dialect.
dialectality
  1. (rare) The quality of being dialectal.
dialecticism
  1. The quality of being dialectic.
dialectick
  1. Obsolete form of dialectic.
dialectician
  1. One versed in dialectics.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The dialectician skillfully navigated the complex arguments, showcasing an impressive understanding of dialectics.”
      “Etc... This is a more immediate preparation for the discussion, and the dialectician as well as the orator will aim for it as much as possible.”
      “The dialectician acts more strictly as such when he grasps an inference between immediate endoxes and the proposed problem.”
dialectometrics
dialectics
  1. plural of dialectic
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “The struggle of the Afro-Americans for the right and the opportunity to assess their ancestral cultures had its own dialectics.”
      “The problem with these views is firstly that it is not clear in what sense dialectics is a logic.”
      “There are other expositions of the theory of dialectics which present it in opposition to formal logic.”
dialectology
  1. The study of dialects.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “German dialectology traditionally names the major dialect groups after Germanic tribes from which they were assumed to have descended.”
      “In generative dialectology, the investigator holds that the language exists within the speaker as a competence which is never fully realized in performance.”
      “Regarding the second principle, the lessons of historical linguistics and dialectology provide the strongest arguments available for the linguistic validity of U.S. Spanish.”
dialecticians
dialecticisms
  1. plural of dialecticism
dialectologies
dialectisms
  1. plural of dialectism
dialecticks
  1. plural of dialectick
dialects
  1. plural of dialect
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Many aboriginal Australian languages have a series of three or four lateral approximants, as do various dialects of Irish.”
      “The dialects of Northumberland have their foundations firmly rooted in Old English Anglo-Saxon, with huge influences from Scandanavia.”
      “Quichua includes the northern dialects of Quechua, the language of the imperial Inca.”
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