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Webster 1913 Edition


Nomic

Nom′ic

,
Adj.
[Gr. [GREEK], fr. [GREEK] a law, custom.]
Customary; ordinary; – applied to the usual English spelling, in distinction from strictly phonetic methods.
H Sweet.
Noun.
Nomic spelling.
A. J. Ellis.

Definition 2024


Nomic

Nomic

See also: nomic

English

Proper noun

Nomic

  1. A game, intended to model certain aspects of legal systems, in which players take turns by modifying the game's rules.
    • 1982, Douglas Hofstadter, Scientific American
      This is not to say that nuanced, intermediate levels may not arise in Nomic through game custom and tacit understandings.
    • 2004, Andrew S. Glassner, Interactive Storytelling
      The game Nomic also has rules that change over time. But these games still have rules for how they're played...
    • 2005, Yusuf Pisan, The Second Australasian Conference on Interactive Entertainment
      Nomic, a "game of self-amendment," is most fundamentally characterized by its rule 213, 213. If the rules are changed so that further play is impossible, or if the legality of a move cannot be determined with finality, or if by the Judge's best reasoning, not overruled, a move appears equally legal and illegal, then the first player unable to complete a turn is the winner.

Anagrams

nomic

nomic

See also: Nomic

English

Adjective

nomic (not comparable)

  1. (dated) customary; ordinary; applied to the usual spelling of a language, in distinction from strictly phonetic methods.
    • 1899, Henry Sweet, The Practical Study of Languages
      The first and most obvious objection brought against the use of a phonetic notation in teaching a foreign language is the danger of confusion between the phonetic and the nomic spelling of the language.
  2. (sciences) Relating to a law