See also: platonic and platònic

English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Latin Platōnicus. By surface analysis, Plato +‎ -n- (intervocalic) +‎ -ic (relating to).

Pronunciation

edit

Adjective

edit

Platonic (comparative more Platonic, superlative most Platonic)

  1. Of or relating to the ancient Greek philosopher Plato or his philosophies.
  2. Alternative letter-case form of platonic (non-sexual).
    • 1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 193:
      The homosexual dismisses heterosexual love as a distasteful bondage to normalcy and bourgeois domestication, but the Platonic lover of the soul is dismissing all sexuality as bondage to the physical world.

Derived terms

edit
edit

Translations

edit

Noun

edit

Platonic (plural Platonics)

  1. A Platonist; a follower of Plato's ideas.
  2. A Platonic solid.

Anagrams

edit