analytic

adjective

an·​a·​lyt·​ic ˌa-nə-ˈli-tik How to pronounce analytic (audio)
variants or analytical
1
: of or relating to analysis or analytics
especially : separating something into component parts or constituent elements
2
: being a proposition (such as "no bachelor is married") whose truth is evident from the meaning of the words it contains compare synthetic
3
: skilled in or using analysis especially in thinking or reasoning
a keenly analytic person/mind
an analytical study
4
linguistics : characterized by the use of function words rather than inflectional forms to express grammatical relationships
analytic languages
5
6
mathematics : treated or treatable by or using the methods of algebra and calculus
7
mathematics
a
of a function of a real variable : capable of being expanded in a Taylor's series in powers of x − h in some neighborhood of the point h
b
of a function of a complex variable : differentiable at every point in some neighborhood of a given point
analytically adverb
analyticity noun

Examples of analytic in a Sentence

presented a very analytical argument for the defendant's guilt
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
If power rankings are more your thing than analytic projections, ESPN has the Texans sixth, the Jaguars 14th, the Colts 18th and the Titans 24th. Nick Suss, The Tennessean, 19 Aug. 2024 Facebook and Google use machine learning as the analytic engine of a self-correcting system, which continually updates its understanding of the data depending on whether its predictions succeed or fail. Henry Farrell, Foreign Affairs, 31 Aug. 2022 This use case can leverage an open-source LLM’s analytic functions, such as clustering or vector similarity. Dean Debiase, Forbes, 25 Nov. 2024 However, analytic departments love him because of his high contact rate and solid exit velocities. Jim Bowden, The Athletic, 13 July 2024 See all Example Sentences for analytic 

Word History

Etymology

analytic borrowed from Late Latin analyticus, borrowed from Greek analytikós, from analýein "to loosen, dissolve, resolve into constitutent elements" + -t-, verbal adjective formative + -ikos -ic entry 1; analytical from Late Latin analyticus + -al entry 1 — more at analysis

First Known Use

1528, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of analytic was in 1528

Dictionary Entries Near analytic

Cite this Entry

“Analytic.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/analytic. Accessed 26 Dec. 2024.

Kids Definition

analytic

adjective
an·​a·​lyt·​ic ˌan-ə-ˈlit-ik How to pronounce analytic (audio)
variants or analytical
1
a
: of or relating to analysis
b
: separating something into its parts or elements
2
: skilled in or using analysis
a keenly analytic person
analytically adverb

Medical Definition

analytic

adjective
an·​a·​lyt·​ic ˌan-ᵊl-ˈit-ik How to pronounce analytic (audio)
variants or analytical
1
: of or relating to analysis
especially : separating something into component parts or constituent elements
2
analytically adverb

More from Merriam-Webster on analytic

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