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Adjective
The vacuum has a fluffy optic cleaner head that not only cleans but also polishes hard floors.—Terri Williams, Architectural Digest, 2 Dec. 2024 However, Corning’s future revenue growth will benefit from its new optic products, including fiber, cables, and connectors, among others, aimed at reducing the overall installation costs.—Trefis Team, Forbes, 3 Dec. 2024
Noun
Those optics games might fool outsiders, but Mara knows what the real score was on Thanksgiving.—Pat Leonard, New York Daily News, 8 Dec. 2024 For The pardon was definitely bad optics, however the Republicans would never have been satisfied with any verdict and would continue to try and persecute/prosecute until the end of time.—Josh Hammer, Newsweek, 3 Dec. 2024 See all Example Sentences for optic
Word History
Etymology
Adjective
Middle English, from Medieval Latin opticus, from Greek optikos, from opsesthai to be going to see; akin to Greek opsis appearance, ōps eye — more at eye
Middle English optic "relating to the eye," from Latin opticus (same meaning), from Greek optikos (same meaning), from opsesthai "to be going to see" — related to autopsy
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