Homo sapien
See also: homo sapien
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Back-formation from translingual Homo sapiens, treated as if an English plural form.
Noun
Homo sapien (plural Homo sapiens)
- (proscribed) A member of the species Homo sapiens.
- 1953, T. R. Schaffler, A Formula for the Process of Socialization, in Journal of Educational Sociology, Vol. 27, No. 2
- A child possesses no human nature at birth. At this time he is only a raw homo sapien with human nature potentials, ...
- 1970, The Kinks (lyrics and music), “Apeman”, in Lola Versus Powerman and the Moneygoround, Part One:
- I think I'm sophisticated / 'Cause I'm living my life like a good homo sapien
- 1982, Emmett Davis, The Ethics of Information Serving Homo Sapiens Vs. Homo Biblios, in Ethics and Reference Services
- In designing the institutions called libraries, we have underemphasized both the contribution each homo sapien, indeed each element of creation, is offering the universe and the support that records of knowledge can provide each homo sapien during portions of their lives to maximize those contributions.
- 2000, Lauretta Lueck, The Many Waters
- As we know, there were many types of hominids, and in various stages of development, but none were modern, or completely Homo sapien.
- 2003, Danny Pate, Creation
- The Anatomically modern Homo sapien was merely a beast who looked exactly like Man. That’s because God used this Anatomically modern Homo sapien as a prototype in creating Adam and Eve.
- 1953, T. R. Schaffler, A Formula for the Process of Socialization, in Journal of Educational Sociology, Vol. 27, No. 2
Usage notes
This form is considered nonstandard, since the Latin root word sapiens is actually an adjective, and is the singular form.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.