Wellsean
See also: Wesleyan
English
Alternative forms
Etymology 1
From the surname of English author H. G. Wells, plus the suffix -ean, which forms adjectives from proper names.
Adjective
Wellsean (comparative more Wellsean, superlative most Wellsean)
- Of or pertaining to, characteristic of, associated with, or suggestive of H. G. Wells, an English writer.
- 1916, John Freeman, “H. G. Wells”, in The Moderns, page 93:
- The extension of such a rigid word as morality, until it includes its own contradictions, is typically Wellsean.
- 2017, Annette Magid, Quintessentially Wilde, page 238:
- In this way, Wilde develops a Wellsean utopian scheme to “better the interplay”: a scheme to recover the connection between the self and others, allowing individuals to counter aestheticism’s drive to wholeness and to grow and change as art does.
Noun
Wellsean (plural Wellseans)
- An admirer of H. G. Wells.
- One who writes in the manner or style of H. G. Wells, or whose writing treats topics associated with Wells.
- 1988, Kingsley Widmer, Counterings: Utopian Dialectics in Contemporary Contexts, page 42:
- Post-Wellseans have sometimes made the alternatives more concurrent. Herbert Read in The Green Child (1935) presented as simultaneous in time two contrasting utopias
Etymology 2
From the surname of chemist A. F. Wells, plus the suffix -ean, which forms adjectives from proper names.
Adjective
Wellsean
- (chemistry, mathematics) Having a structure within which both polygonality and connectivity are fractional.
- 2002, Michael J. Bucknum, “Jubilite: A 4-,8-Connected Cubic Structural Pattern in Space Group Pm3”, in Chemistry Preprint Archive, page 138:
- The unit cell contains a single 8-connected cube-centered vertex, six 4-connected distorted square planar vertices and eight 4-connected distorted tetrahedral vertices. It is a Wellsean structure with a Wells point symbol given by (468)(48)(48) and a Schläfli symbol of (5, 4.2667).
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