hexiology
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ἕξις (héxis, “state or habit”) + -ology. Coined in 1894 by an English naturalist, St. George Jackson Mivart.
Noun
hexiology (uncountable)
- (obsolete) The science dealing with the relations of living creatures to other organisms, and to their surrounding conditions generally.
- 1881, Harper's Magazine
- Dr. Mivart treats elaborately upon the anatomy, physiology, psychology, taxonomy, and hexicology of the cat […]
- 1881, Harper's Magazine
Synonyms
- ecology