Definition of Aesthetician

1. Noun. A worker skilled in giving beauty treatments (manicures and facials etc.).

Exact synonyms: Esthetician
Generic synonyms: Skilled Worker, Skilled Workman, Trained Worker

2. Noun. A philosopher who specializes in the nature of beauty.
Exact synonyms: Esthetician
Generic synonyms: Philosopher
Derivative terms: Aesthetics, Esthetics

Definition of Aesthetician

1. Noun. One who studies aesthetics; a student of art or beauty. ¹

2. Noun. A beautician; somebody employed to provide beauty treatments such as manicures and facials. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Aesthetician

1. [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Aesthetician

aesthesodic
aesthetasc
aesthetascs
aesthete
aesthetes
aesthetic
aesthetic emotion
aesthetic surgeon
aesthetic surgeons
aesthetic surgeries
aesthetic surgery
aesthetical
aesthetically
aesthetican
aestheticans
aesthetician (current term)
aestheticians
aestheticise
aestheticised
aestheticises
aestheticising
aestheticism
aestheticisms
aestheticize
aestheticized
aestheticizes
aestheticizing
aesthetics
aestho-physiology
aesthophysiology

Literary usage of Aesthetician

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Aesthetic Doctrine of Montesquieu: Its Application in His Writings by Edwin Preston Dargan (1907)
"As an aesthetician, it is evident that he cannot stand as a theorist of the first water. His system, if system it can be called, lacks coherency and ..."

2. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1912)
"... and we shall venture into the field of the aesthetician only in so far as such a course seems to be demanded in the interests of a clear and systematic ..."

3. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1921)
"But for the aesthetician there exist no things which are measured, weighed, or counted ; there exist only images, spiritual acts. ..."

4. The Bookman (1899)
"8vo, cloth $i-7S These essays, which are In the same vein as his previous volume, present him in the character of a philosopher and an aesthetician. ..."

5. The Quarterly Review by John Gibson Lockhart, George Walter Prothero, William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, Baron Rowland Edmund Prothero Ernle, Sir William Smith (1904)
"The application of the word ' beautiful' to whatever peculiarity an aesthetician recognises with satisfaction in a work of art, has therefore been the chief ..."

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