Lexicographical Neighbors of Audiles
Literary usage of Audiles
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Analytic Psychology by George Frederick Stout (1918)
"The audiles are those in whom presentations of sound are predominant. ...
Great engineers are likely to be visuals, great musicians audiles, and so forth. ..."
2. Educational Psychology by Edward Lee Thorndike (1921)
"People were called visualizers, audiles, motiles, etc., with the meaning that
the visualizers had more vivid, faithful and frequent visual images than other ..."
3. Educational Psychology by Daniel Starch (1919)
"Mankind as a whole does not fall into sharply or even vaguely divided groups of
visuals, audiles, and so on. They arc not found except in rare instances. ..."
4. Making the Most of One's Mind by John Adams (1915)
"The first kind are called visuals, the second audiles, the third tactiles.
This does not mean that the visuals learn only by the eye, ..."
5. Symptomatology, Psychognosis, and Diagnosis of Psychopathic Diseases by Boris Sidis (1914)
"... auditory illusions and hallucinations predominate in the audiles; and while,
on the one hand, paranoiacs are often audiles, ..."
6. Principles of Education Applied to Practice by Wallace Franklin Jones (1911)
"... poor hold of what he hears only, and audiles are likely to be slow in seizing
what they see only, and motiles are most at home if they can do things. ..."
7. Psychology as Applied to Education by Peter Magnus Magnusson (1913)
"Visualizers, audiles, and Motiles. — The mind deals in symbols. ... These are
called audiles. Finally, many find that their appreciation and grasp of the ..."
8. School: A Monthly Record of Educational Thought and Progress by Laurie Magnus, Robert Binney Lattimer (1906)
"According to the particular sense preferred we may classify our pupils as visuals,
audiles, tactiles. The other two senses have so little scope in school ..."