Definition of Cistic

1. a. See Cystic.

Definition of Cistic

1. Adjective. (alternative form of cystic) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Cistic

1. like a cist [adj]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Cistic

cisterna cruralis
cisterna fossae lateralis cerebri
cisterna interpeduncularis
cisterna magna
cisterna perilymphatica
cisterna pontis
cisterna superioris
cisterna venae magnae cerebri
cisternae
cisternae subarachnoideales
cisternal
cisternal maturation model
cisternal puncture
cisternography
cisterns
cistic (current term)
cistrome
cistromes
cistron
cistronic
cistrons
cists
cistus
cistuses
cistvaen
cistvaens
cisvestism
ciswoman
ciswomen
cit

Literary usage of Cistic

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A System of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1817)
"cistic oxide. Magnesia 51'QO Silica 20-00 Phosphate of iron 21-84 Carbonate of ... The substance called cistic oxide was discovered, « Ann. de Chim. ..."

2. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"Too little is known of the manner in which the constituents of cistic oxide are combined, to allow of a conjecture to be formed of the probable source of ..."

3. The Sounds and Inflections of the Greek Dialects: Ionic by Herbert Weir Smyth (1894)
"Names in Tier- are ita- cistic, but not so those in ТГ/х-. It is better to assume a root gat, whose weak form is ql in ..."

4. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1844)
"Had not the Left sociologists, headed by de Man, proved to everyone's satisfaction that Fas- cistic movements find fertile soil only where poverty reigns ..."

5. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1912)
"Vergerio had to return from Riva, and began a publi- cistic activity which turned more and more against the Roman Catholic Church. ..."

6. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1905)
"Fourthly, the pragmati- cistic meaning is undoubtedly general ; and it is equally indisputable that the general is of the nature of a word or sign. ..."

7. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"Edmund Burke develops this empiri- cistic vein in aesthetics further, and derives the feeling for the sublime from the instinct for self-preservation, ..."

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