endemic

1 of 2

adjective

en·​dem·​ic en-ˈde-mik How to pronounce endemic (audio)
in-
1
a
: belonging or native to a particular people or country
b
: characteristic of or prevalent in a particular field, area, or environment
problems endemic to translation
the self-indulgence endemic in the film industry
2
: restricted or peculiar to a locality or region
endemic diseases
an endemic species
endemically adverb
endemicity noun
endemism noun

endemic

2 of 2

noun

en·​dem·​ic en-ˈde-mik How to pronounce endemic (audio)
in-
: an organism that is restricted or peculiar to a locality or region : an endemic organism

Did you know?

Ever wonder how endemic ended up in the English language? Endemic made its way into English via French and New Latin and likely has its ultimate origin in the Greek adjective éndēmos, a word with multiple uses, among which is one describing a disease confined to one area. Éndēmos was formed from en- ( “in”) and a form of the noun dêmos, meaning “district, country, people.” That word was also key to the formation of the earlier word on which éndēmos was modeled: epidēmia, meaning “disease affecting a large number of individuals.” English adopted epidemic (also via French) in the early 17th century, but endemic didn’t become, uh, endemic until a century and a half later. (The now too-familiar relation pandemic slipped into the language in the mid 17th.) In current use, endemic characterizes diseases that are generally found in a particular area—malaria, for example, is said to be endemic to tropical and subtropical regions—while epidemic indicates a sudden, severe outbreak within that region or group. Endemic is also used by biologists to characterize plant and animal species that are found only in a given area.

Choose the Right Synonym for endemic

native, indigenous, endemic, aboriginal mean belonging to a locality.

native implies birth or origin in a place or region and may suggest compatibility with it.

native tribal customs

indigenous applies to that which is not only native but which, as far as can be determined, has never been introduced or brought from elsewhere.

indigenous plants

endemic implies being peculiar to a region.

a disease endemic in Africa

aboriginal implies having no known others preceding in occupancy of a particular region.

the aboriginal peoples of Australia

Example Sentences

Adjective Divorce has become so endemic in our society that a whole lore has risen up around it: that divorce is a temporary crisis; that so many children have experienced their parents' divorce that children nowadays do not worry much about it; that in fact it makes things easier, and it is itself a mere rite of passage; that if the parents feel better, so will the children. Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, New Republic, 6 May 2002
Situated only 250 miles off the coast of Africa, Madagascar is biologically unique. Not only does it have a rich animal and plant life, it also houses a huge number of endemic species found nowhere else on earth. Jim Milliot et al., Publishers Weekly, 15 May 2000
The rap performers I enjoy are those who emphasize production values, songcraft and that quality of playfulness endemic to all good pop. Francis Davis, Atlantic, October 1993
the fish is not an endemic species of the lake, and it is rapidly devouring the native trout population
Recent Examples on the Web
Adjective
All of the confirmed or probable cases were exposed outside of Arizona, in areas where Lyme disease is endemic. Tiffany Acosta arizona Republic, The Arizona Republic, 23 June 2023 For years, experts have recommended that transplant networks screen donors who were born in countries where the parasite is endemic. Caroline Chen, ProPublica, 23 June 2023 This article has been updated to reflect that the correct number of endemic reef fish species in the southwestern Atlantic is 111. Osmar J. Luiz, The Conversation, 1 June 2023 Or with Paris Hilton saying she had been abused as a child, meaning her seemingly unfounded mode of celebrity, the unhinged bling of her stardom, so endemic to that decade, could in fact be understood as the triumph of a victim. Kristian Vistrup Madsen, Harper's Magazine, 21 May 2023 The creatures, mainly found in Tasmania, could help control feral cat and fox populations in Australia that threaten other endangered and endemic species. Ingrid Vasquez, Peoplemag, 17 May 2023 The oil-rich but energy-poor West African nation has ramped up investments in the power sector but endemic corruption and mismanagement have resulted in little gains. Mogomotsi Magome, ajc, 25 Mar. 2023 Shooting New Mexico for South Dakota, Tost incorporates the wide-open spaces, cultural conflicts and endemic lawlessness typical to Westerns, while inverting conventional expectations by foregrounding Native American perspectives on some of the film’s thornier social issues. Justin Lowe, The Hollywood Reporter, 23 Mar. 2023 The change to formally end the national emergency declarations would restructure the federal government’s response to treating the virus as an endemic threat to public health that can be managed through normal authorities. Laura Baisas, Popular Science, 31 Jan. 2023 See More

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'endemic.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

Adjective

borrowed from French & New Latin; French endémique, borrowed from New Latin endēmicus, from Medieval Latin *endēmia "disease fixed in one locality" + New Latin -icus -ic entry 1; Medieval Latin *endēmia, probably from Greek éndēmos "at home, living in a place, native, confined to one area (of a disease, in galen)" (from en- en- entry 2 + -dēmos, adjective derivative of dêmos "district, country, people") on the model of epidēmia "disease affecting a large number of individuals" — more at demo-, epidemic entry 1

Note: Medieval Latin *endēmia is presumed on the basis of Middle French endemie, occurring in Thomas Le Forestier's Le regime contre epidimie et pestilence (Rouen, 1495) (see Revue de linguistique romane, vol. 36 [1972], p. 231).

Noun

derivative of endemic entry 1

First Known Use

Adjective

1759, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Noun

1926, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of endemic was in 1759

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Dictionary Entries Near endemic

Cite this Entry

“Endemic.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/endemic. Accessed 9 Jul. 2023.

Kids Definition

endemic

adjective
en·​dem·​ic
en-ˈdem-ik,
in-
: originating or growing or found especially and often only in a certain locality or region
endemic diseases
an endemic plant

Medical Definition

endemic

1 of 2 adjective
en·​dem·​ic en-ˈdem-ik, in- How to pronounce endemic (audio)
: restricted or peculiar to a locality or region
endemic diseases
an endemic species
compare epidemic sense 1, sporadic sense 1
endemically adverb

endemic

2 of 2 noun
1
: an endemic disease or an instance of its occurrence
2
: an endemic organism

More from Merriam-Webster on endemic

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