socio-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Society:
社会:
sociometry.
社会测量 - Social:
社会的:
socioeconomic.
社会经济学的
语源
- French
法语 - from Latin socius [companion] * see sek w- 1
源自 拉丁语 socius [同伴] *参见 sek w- 1
socio-
combining form
denoting social or society
⇒
socioeconomic
⇒
sociopolitical
⇒
sociology
socio-
Word Origin
1
a combining form used, with the meanings “social,” “sociological,” or “society,” in the formation of compound words:
sociometry; socioeconomic.
Origin
combining form of Latin socius a fellow, companion, comrade; see -o-
Related Words
- sociobiology
- sociocentric
- sociocracy
- sociocultural
- sociodrama
- socioeconomic
socio-a word element representing 'social', 'sociological', as in sociometry.
[combining form representing Latin socius companion]socio-
combining form
sociogram
2. social and
sociopolitical
combining form
ETYMOLOGY French, from Latin socius companion
1. society : socialsociogram
2. social and
sociopolitical
socio-
combining form
1.
- relating to society; society and...表示“与社会有关的”; “社会和…”:
-
socio-economic.
2.
- relating to sociology; sociology and...表示“与社会学有关的”; “社会学和…”:
-
sociolinguistics.
词源
from Latin socius 'companion'.
1656 New Almanac ( ed. 2) 7His socio-forger.
1881 L. F. Ward in Trans. Anthrop. Soc. Washington (1882) I. 97Those in consequence of which social progress tends to defeat itself—anti-*sociocentric facts.
1930 . [ see cerebrocentric a.]
1970 J. D. Caute Fanon iv. 49There was the Fanon who condemned such insularity as egocentric and sociocentric.
1947 G. Murphy Personality xv. 386Side by side with egocentrism there was *sociocentrism.
1858 R. Congreve tr. Comte'sCatal. Pos.Relig. xiii. 401Feudalism combined both.., so as to constitute an anticipation of the final *sociocracy.
1887 Pall Mall G. 15 June 3 An idea which in its germ, sociocracy borrows from theocracy.
1887 Women's Union Jrnl. 15 Dec. 94A School of *Sociocrats which held that Communism was impossible because gradations of rank were indestructible.
1887 Macm. Mag. Aug. 318This method of succession, named by Comte *sociocratic heredity.
1934 J. L. Moreno Who shall Survive? vii. 74This demonstrates what we may call the process of slowing down of interest, the cooling off of emotional expansiveness, the *sociodynamic decline of interest.
1977 R. Holland Self & Social Context vii. 221The hypothesis that there are psychodynamic and sociodynamic processes at work even in this relatively ‘self-conscious’ area of knowledge production.
1978 Nature 18 May 184/2 The number of administrators in an organisation expands irresistibly in response to the first law of *sociodynamics.
1972 Biol. Abstr. LIV. 6370/2Geographic vegetational zones are given, as are vegetational stages. *Socioecologic groups are described.
1961 Ibid. XXXVI. 5947/1 (heading)A *socio-ecological study of pastured domestic rabbits in Mae-sima.
1973 W. P. J. Dittus in R. H. Tuttle Socioecol. &Psychol. Primates 149Its net reproductive rate is attuned to the availability of food, and is regulated through socioecological mechanisms.
1972 Biol. Abstr. LIV. Index 3830/1*Socio ecology.
1975 L. L. & D. J. Klein in R. H. Tuttle Socioecol. &Psychol. Primates 83A dietary factor..that is generally over looked in discussion of primate socioecology, was the degree to which specific primates are able to utilize..varied substances in any single day.
1979 Nature 8 Feb. 433/3 The main aims are to study the socio-ecology of the lesser-known species such as the slow loris and the pig-tailed macaque.
1969 Zigler & Child in Lindzey & Aronson Handbk. SocialPsychol. III. xxiv. 484Two main types of interpretations have been employed to explain the cross-cultural findings, the *sociogenic and the psychogenic.
1978 Language LIV. 228 His separation of cultures, making sociogenic interaction impossible.
1941 W. Dennis in GeneticPsychol. Monographs XXIII. 187Prior to the second year of life *sociogenous responses, those which are learned through the intercession of other persons, are few.
1967 C. L. Markmann tr. Fanon's Black Skin, White Masks (1968) 13Besides phylogeny and ontogeny stands sociogeny.
1933 J. L. Moreno in Proc. Amer. Assoc. Mental Deficiency 236To visualize how each individual is affected by the maze of attractions and repulsions coming from any individual or going out from any individual of a group we mapped these relations graphically into a *sociogram.
1972 M. Argyle SocialPsychol. of Work vi. 109The choices may be plotted to form a sociogram, and this can show the affective structure of a group very clearly.
1954 Encounter Dec. 55/1 A *sociographic study attempts to relate all the data concerning a given locality in a meaningful way.
1881 O. T. Mason in Ann. Rep. SmithsonianInst. (1883) 501Observing and descriptive stage..*sociography.
1940 C. P. Loomis Tönnies's Fundamental ConceptsSociol. p. xxiv, (heading)Empirical sociology or sociography.
1966 Listener 12 May 677/1 We do not yet have a sociography of English Catholicism.
1968 Internat. Encycl. SocialSci. XV. 49/1To this he ..opposed his own notion of ‘sociography’, in which systematic observation, case studies, and other qualitative methods were included, together with statistics. [ sc. Tönnies]
1950 H. H. Jennings Leadership & Isolation (ed. 2) xiii. 276This collective, more or less formalized setting, where concerns must be shared and obligations held in common..might appropriately be called ..the *sociogroup.
1956 J. Klein Study of Groups 179In sociometric theory a sociogroup is based on preferences involving work in the group.
1858 Brit. Quart.Rev. LVI. 441This is an essential feature of Positivist *sociolatry.
1867 Contemp. Rev. VI. 400The system of sociolatry, which is..to furnish to later generations a complete and permanent religion.
1934 Webster, *Sociomedical.
1961 Lancet 2 Sept. 549/1 Euthanasia..is more than a sociomedical problem.
1977 Time 10 Jan. 41/1 The flourishing condom market is only one sign of a growing sociomedical phenomenon in the U.S. : a back-to-basics movement in birth control.
1902 J. M. Baldwin Social & Ethical Interpretations (ed. 3) 3The Biogenetic method is valuable mainly in investigating the *socionomic forces (those which condition or limit social change, but are not themselves social in their character).
1935 Jrnl. Mammology XVI. 176As yet..it is impossible to ascertain the central grouping tendencies and the characteristic socionomic sex ratio (ratio of males to females living within groups).
1976 Nature 12 Feb. 459/1 Most body weights..do not take into account interspecies differences in socionomic sex ratio.
1902 J. M. Baldwin Social & Ethical Interpretations (ed. 3) xi. 484*Socionomics—the science of the relation of social life to its environment, including other social groups.
1892 Spencer Princ. Ethics I. §192. 472In *sociophagous nations like ours, not much pleasure is caused by contemplating the cessation of conquests.
1895 Atlantic Monthly Feb. 195 In a society where the *socio⁓static press is always at work.
1963 Cambr. Rev. 4 May 401/1The Leitmotiv of the ‘*socio-critical’ movement is ‘human destiny and national destiny’. [ in literature]
1929 H. Schreuder Pejorative SenseDevel. in English ii. vi. 65 (heading)The *socio-cultural group.
1958 New Biol. XXVI. 123In discussing human potentiality it is not useful to dissociate socio-cultural from biological factors.
1978 Language LIV. 188 Linguistics consists partly in an investigation of certain aspects of human socio-cultural behavior.
1980 Times Lit. Suppl. 19 Sept. 1044/4For various socio-cultural reasons, the short story has always occupied a more central place in Australian fiction than in European literatures.
1968 C. A. Doxiadis Betw. Dystopia & Utopia 66We are not in a position yet to define how far he is adjustable either biologically or *socio-culturally. [ sc. man]
1972 Bankers Mag. Winter 68/2*Socio-demographic characteristics of the population such as age, sex, income, occupation, race, . [ etc.]
1961 Times 16 Sept. 9/3 There is here an old *socio-educational dispute in a new context.
1974 Times Lit. Suppl. 31 May 580/5While the mother's strategies correlate with the cognitive development of the child..this correlation is totally unrelated to social class—which effectively deflates some hoary socio-educational myths.
1973 Word 1966 XXII. 112 Interaction situations, with men preponderantly performing the task role, and women, the *socioemotional.
1969 Punch 22 Jan. p. vi/2 *Socio-environmental pressures on me had taken an entirely different turn: I had been seduced by advertising.
1962 in H. O. Beecheno Introd. BusinessStud. p. iii,A condensed survey of the historical background of our present economy..and the more basic *socio-geographic factors.
1945 Archit. Rev. XCVII. 70/1The *socio-geographical differentiation in our own cities is simple and peaceful compared with that of a newer country like the United States.
1949 Sci. Amer. Oct. 53/3Their philosophical ideas stem from the same *socio-historical conditions of our epoch.
1965 English Studies XLVI. 390 Melville embodies the concept of revolt in specific socio-historical frames.
1909 W. H. Tolman Social Engineering xii. 366A new profession necessitated by the complexity of *socio-industrial relations.
1891 Kipling City Dreadf. Nt. 86They are spared all *socio-official worry.
1933 A. Parry Garrets & Pretenders p. ix,Since Bohemianism is pre-eminently a *socio-literary phenomenon, the periods of its rise and decay coincided fairly well throughout the world.
1980 Times Lit. Suppl. 7 Nov. 1249/2He acquired half a dozen languages that served as socio-literary tools. [ sc. Edmund Wilson]
1884 Pall Mall G. 16 Feb. 2/1 The political or *socio-political questions of the day.
1968 New Left Rev. Jan.–Feb. 63Germany did not merely invent the ersatz industrially, it produced it *socio-politically as well.
1899 Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. IV. 661Such a theory can be developed only along *socio-psychological lines.
1970 Nature 19 Dec. 1136/1 Too little work has been done on the socio-psychological aspects of spaceflight.
1971 J. J. Shapiro tr. Habermas's Toward Rational Society ii. 30Insensitivity to what in more naive times philosphers called ‘the good life’ can only be broken through today under the *socio-psychologically exceptional conditions of university study.
1964 M. A. K. Halliday et al. LinguisticSci. iv. 86Our dialects and accents are no longer simply regional: they are regional and social, or ‘*socio-regional’.
1871 Aldine Jan. 18/2 It is a prime merit of such writers as Mr. Keeler and Bret Harte to give a rousing nudge to the saintly self-complacency of our *socio-religious ‘priggishness’.
1889 Spectator 26 Oct., The socio-religious life of Scotland.
1891 Nation 3 Sept. 182 The current *socio-scientific use of environment is first found in Carlyle (1827).
1932 S. Zuckerman Soc. Life Monkeys & Apes xiv. 215Facts concerning sub-human primate *socio-sexual responses.
1931 *Sociotechnic . [ see nuttery 3]
1937 Burlington Mag. Nov. 246/1The concreteness with which *socio-technical problems are realized.
1975 Times Lit. Suppl. 28 Feb. 229/3P. G. Herbst's Socio-technical Design..explores the interaction between the social and technical parts of industrial, educational and scientific organizations.
1976 A. Cherns ( title)*Sociotechnics.
Ibid. p. ix,Sociotechnics..is..a quest for a methodology of bringing the knowledge and concepts of the social sciences to bear on human and social issues.
socio-
word-forming element meaning "social, of society; social and," also "having to do with sociology," from combining form of Latin socius "companion, ally, associate, fellow, sharer" (see social, adj.). Common in compounds since c.1880.
ORIGIN: from Latin socius (see sociable ) + -o- .
socio-
combining form
Etymology: French, from Latin socius associate, companion — more at social
1. : society
< sociography >
: social
< sociogram >
2. : social and
< socioeducational >
< sociopolitical >
< socioreligious >
3. : sociological and
< sociolegal >
< sociopsychiatric >
1.
< sociography >
: social
< sociogram >
2.
< socioeducational >
< sociopolitical >
< socioreligious >
3.
< sociolegal >
< sociopsychiatric >
socio-
Prefix
- Forms terms relating to society.
Derived terms
English words prefixed with socio-