Telic

Telic

ˈtelik

Adjective

  • (Of an action or attitude) Directed or tending to a definite end.
  • (Of a verb, conjunction, or clause) Expressing goal, result, or purpose.

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Example Sentences

“Savannah received a review of being a telic, goal-oriented worker.”

“The task force had a concrete, telic goal.”

“The support group did not have a telic purpose; it was meant to provide comfort.”

Word Origin

Greek, mid-19th century

Why this word?

This word stems from the Greek “telikos,” meaning “final,” originally from “telos,” meaning “end, goal, result.” The adjective can apply toward actions, meaning it’s directed toward a definite end, or it can be used in a more linguistic sense, meaning the word it’s describing has an end goal. For example, “finished” is a telic verb because it implies total completeness. There’s also a psychological principle that human motivation falls into two primary states: “telic” and “paratelic.” In the telic mode, a person is mostly motivated by a specific goal, like earning a paycheck for completed work. This is also called extrinsic motivation. In the paratelic state, a person is motivated by the activity itself, which is also known as intrinsic motivation. 

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äbˈno͞obəˌlāt