concretum
English
Etymology
concrete + -um
Noun
concretum (plural concreta)
- (philosophy) Something that is concrete, rather than abstract.
- 2008 August 5, Uriah Kriegel, “The dispensability of (merely) intentional objects”, in Philosophical Studies, volume 141, number 1, DOI: :
- There are quite familiar and truly outstanding liabilities—ontological, epistemological, and phenomenological—associated with saying that merely intentional objects are abstracta, or mental concreta, or non-existent non-mental concreta.
-
Coordinate terms
- abstractum
Latin
Participle
concrētum
- nominative neuter singular of concrētus
- accusative masculine singular of concrētus
- accusative neuter singular of concrētus
- vocative neuter singular of concrētus
References
- concretum in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers