Improved variations of the word “comicist”?











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I believe the word comicist is a valid word (for one who is a follower of comics), but it doesn't sound right to me.



Example sentence:




He was an accomplished comicist after decades of working in the industry.




ist definition:




a follower of a distinctive practice, system, or philosophy, typically a political ideology or an artistic movement.




Some words sound natural with ist, such as cartoonist and scientist. But the ist added to comic sounds contrived.



Are there any alternatives with the same meaning? Are there rules for adding letters to ist to improve pronunciation?










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Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1




    Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
    – Robusto
    2 hours ago










  • "Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago










  • I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
    – Jeshua Lacock
    2 hours ago










  • It's not a valid word unless people use it.
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I believe the word comicist is a valid word (for one who is a follower of comics), but it doesn't sound right to me.



Example sentence:




He was an accomplished comicist after decades of working in the industry.




ist definition:




a follower of a distinctive practice, system, or philosophy, typically a political ideology or an artistic movement.




Some words sound natural with ist, such as cartoonist and scientist. But the ist added to comic sounds contrived.



Are there any alternatives with the same meaning? Are there rules for adding letters to ist to improve pronunciation?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1




    Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
    – Robusto
    2 hours ago










  • "Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago










  • I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
    – Jeshua Lacock
    2 hours ago










  • It's not a valid word unless people use it.
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I believe the word comicist is a valid word (for one who is a follower of comics), but it doesn't sound right to me.



Example sentence:




He was an accomplished comicist after decades of working in the industry.




ist definition:




a follower of a distinctive practice, system, or philosophy, typically a political ideology or an artistic movement.




Some words sound natural with ist, such as cartoonist and scientist. But the ist added to comic sounds contrived.



Are there any alternatives with the same meaning? Are there rules for adding letters to ist to improve pronunciation?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I believe the word comicist is a valid word (for one who is a follower of comics), but it doesn't sound right to me.



Example sentence:




He was an accomplished comicist after decades of working in the industry.




ist definition:




a follower of a distinctive practice, system, or philosophy, typically a political ideology or an artistic movement.




Some words sound natural with ist, such as cartoonist and scientist. But the ist added to comic sounds contrived.



Are there any alternatives with the same meaning? Are there rules for adding letters to ist to improve pronunciation?







single-word-requests pronunciation






share|improve this question







New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 3 hours ago









Jeshua Lacock

1033




1033




New contributor




Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Jeshua Lacock is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1




    Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
    – Robusto
    2 hours ago










  • "Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago










  • I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
    – Jeshua Lacock
    2 hours ago










  • It's not a valid word unless people use it.
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago














  • 1




    Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
    – Robusto
    2 hours ago










  • "Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago










  • I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
    – Jeshua Lacock
    2 hours ago










  • It's not a valid word unless people use it.
    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago








1




1




Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
– Robusto
2 hours ago




Why do you believe comicist is a valid word? Did you find it in a dictionary somewhere? I've never heard it nor can I find it in any of the usual sources.
– Robusto
2 hours ago












"Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
– Hot Licks
2 hours ago




"Comicist" is apparently the name of a magazine for people interested in comic books. That appears to account for the bulk of Google "hits".
– Hot Licks
2 hours ago












I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
– Jeshua Lacock
2 hours ago




I thought that comicist would be a valid word for the same reasons cartoonist is a valid word.
– Jeshua Lacock
2 hours ago












It's not a valid word unless people use it.
– Hot Licks
2 hours ago




It's not a valid word unless people use it.
– Hot Licks
2 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
1
down vote



accepted










The clos­est we have to or­tho­graph­ic rules that could ap­ply
here is that words end­ing in ‑c that get end­ings that start
with e, i, or y must first add a k to pre­serve the sound.
That’s why words like pic­nic and traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly be­come
pic­nick­er and traf­fick­er re­spec­tive­ly.



So you could cer­tain­ly have a comick­er.



But words that take ‑ist don’t seem to care how they’re pro­nounced,
so you wind up with phys­ics but phys­i­cist, lyrics but
lyr­i­cist. Th­ese leads you down the un­pleas­ant path from comics to comi­cist, which
I can­not blame you in the least for be­ing un­com­fort­able with. I am, too.



What­ev­er you do, your main prob­lem is go­ing to be that with­out
sup­port­ing con­text to prime your read­er, peo­ple won’t be sure
whether you are talk­ing about hu­man co­me­di­ans or about graph­ic
car­toons. This hap­pens al­ready with words like comi­cry, which
is am­bigu­ous in this same way: it makes you won­der whether it
is about lit­er­a­ture or the stage or the graph­ic arts.



Com­ic books have on­ly been around by that name for a smidgen more
than a cen­tu­ry, so you won’t be able to rope in old words. A
com­i­car is a writ­er of come­dies, while co­mi­ces were a
sort of Ro­man as­sem­bly, per­haps bet­ter known as co­mi­tia
these days if they’re men­tioned at all.



On­ly in 1913 did com­ic artists start to re­fer to those artists
who ac­tu­al­ly drew comics. Then well be­fore the end of that
cen­tu­ry, at­tribu­tive use such as com­ic col­lec­tors no longer
raised any eye­brows.



Al­so dur­ing the lat­ter­most parts of that same cen­tu­ry did
comix come to mean an un­der­ground or counter‑cul­tur­al com­ic
book in­tend­ed not for chil­dren but for adults. How­ev­er, I don’t
know how wide­ly that word is known, and of course au­ral­ly
comix­ist is no bet­ter than comi­cist.



Nonethe­less, sev­er­al pos­si­bil­i­ties along that line which you
might con­sid­er are a comix­ist or a comix­er. Th­ese are not
es­tab­lished terms, but they wouldn’t con­fuse most any­one hear­ing
them.



How­ev­er, in writ­ing it might be less than scin­til­lat­ing­ly
clear whether a comix­er was a fan of com­ic books or some­one
who co­öper­at­ed with one or more oth­ers in some sort of mix­ing
project; that is, a co-mix­er.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Comicist from comics is no less valid a formation than physicist from physics, and, in fact, has been attempted before:




    Those who heard Mr. Andrews on Tuesday evening, have obtained a knowledge of the great literateur and comicist [Mark Twain] which would take weeks and months of rigorous study to accomplish … — Broadford Courier And Reedy Creek Times (Broadford VC), 24 July 1896.



    Up till now,' one of them writes, ' we did not know Puccini as a comicist except in some isolated examples … — The Musical Times 60 (1919), 138.




    Now Mark Twain is usually called a humorist and with Puccini, the word looks like a nonce creation to pair with dramatist. In any case, the word was not frequent enough to appear at its proper place, nestled between comices and comicly in volume 3 of the New English Dictionary, 1893.



    This is tantamount to hanging a “vacant” sign on the word and either waiting for a new lexical tenant or letting it fade away as so mainy failed coinages.



    A fanzine in the 1990s took up the word in the sense you envision and used it as the title:



    enter image description here



    Source



    For comicist to become a common designation for a comics author/writer/artist requires more than an ephemeral publication or a discussion on a website like this one. If, say, the late Stan Lee_ had casually referred to himself a few times in public as a comicist, then all the kids who drew comics on the back of their biology notebooks would want to grow up to be one. And a word is reborn.






    share|improve this answer





















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      1
      down vote



      accepted










      The clos­est we have to or­tho­graph­ic rules that could ap­ply
      here is that words end­ing in ‑c that get end­ings that start
      with e, i, or y must first add a k to pre­serve the sound.
      That’s why words like pic­nic and traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly be­come
      pic­nick­er and traf­fick­er re­spec­tive­ly.



      So you could cer­tain­ly have a comick­er.



      But words that take ‑ist don’t seem to care how they’re pro­nounced,
      so you wind up with phys­ics but phys­i­cist, lyrics but
      lyr­i­cist. Th­ese leads you down the un­pleas­ant path from comics to comi­cist, which
      I can­not blame you in the least for be­ing un­com­fort­able with. I am, too.



      What­ev­er you do, your main prob­lem is go­ing to be that with­out
      sup­port­ing con­text to prime your read­er, peo­ple won’t be sure
      whether you are talk­ing about hu­man co­me­di­ans or about graph­ic
      car­toons. This hap­pens al­ready with words like comi­cry, which
      is am­bigu­ous in this same way: it makes you won­der whether it
      is about lit­er­a­ture or the stage or the graph­ic arts.



      Com­ic books have on­ly been around by that name for a smidgen more
      than a cen­tu­ry, so you won’t be able to rope in old words. A
      com­i­car is a writ­er of come­dies, while co­mi­ces were a
      sort of Ro­man as­sem­bly, per­haps bet­ter known as co­mi­tia
      these days if they’re men­tioned at all.



      On­ly in 1913 did com­ic artists start to re­fer to those artists
      who ac­tu­al­ly drew comics. Then well be­fore the end of that
      cen­tu­ry, at­tribu­tive use such as com­ic col­lec­tors no longer
      raised any eye­brows.



      Al­so dur­ing the lat­ter­most parts of that same cen­tu­ry did
      comix come to mean an un­der­ground or counter‑cul­tur­al com­ic
      book in­tend­ed not for chil­dren but for adults. How­ev­er, I don’t
      know how wide­ly that word is known, and of course au­ral­ly
      comix­ist is no bet­ter than comi­cist.



      Nonethe­less, sev­er­al pos­si­bil­i­ties along that line which you
      might con­sid­er are a comix­ist or a comix­er. Th­ese are not
      es­tab­lished terms, but they wouldn’t con­fuse most any­one hear­ing
      them.



      How­ev­er, in writ­ing it might be less than scin­til­lat­ing­ly
      clear whether a comix­er was a fan of com­ic books or some­one
      who co­öper­at­ed with one or more oth­ers in some sort of mix­ing
      project; that is, a co-mix­er.






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        1
        down vote



        accepted










        The clos­est we have to or­tho­graph­ic rules that could ap­ply
        here is that words end­ing in ‑c that get end­ings that start
        with e, i, or y must first add a k to pre­serve the sound.
        That’s why words like pic­nic and traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly be­come
        pic­nick­er and traf­fick­er re­spec­tive­ly.



        So you could cer­tain­ly have a comick­er.



        But words that take ‑ist don’t seem to care how they’re pro­nounced,
        so you wind up with phys­ics but phys­i­cist, lyrics but
        lyr­i­cist. Th­ese leads you down the un­pleas­ant path from comics to comi­cist, which
        I can­not blame you in the least for be­ing un­com­fort­able with. I am, too.



        What­ev­er you do, your main prob­lem is go­ing to be that with­out
        sup­port­ing con­text to prime your read­er, peo­ple won’t be sure
        whether you are talk­ing about hu­man co­me­di­ans or about graph­ic
        car­toons. This hap­pens al­ready with words like comi­cry, which
        is am­bigu­ous in this same way: it makes you won­der whether it
        is about lit­er­a­ture or the stage or the graph­ic arts.



        Com­ic books have on­ly been around by that name for a smidgen more
        than a cen­tu­ry, so you won’t be able to rope in old words. A
        com­i­car is a writ­er of come­dies, while co­mi­ces were a
        sort of Ro­man as­sem­bly, per­haps bet­ter known as co­mi­tia
        these days if they’re men­tioned at all.



        On­ly in 1913 did com­ic artists start to re­fer to those artists
        who ac­tu­al­ly drew comics. Then well be­fore the end of that
        cen­tu­ry, at­tribu­tive use such as com­ic col­lec­tors no longer
        raised any eye­brows.



        Al­so dur­ing the lat­ter­most parts of that same cen­tu­ry did
        comix come to mean an un­der­ground or counter‑cul­tur­al com­ic
        book in­tend­ed not for chil­dren but for adults. How­ev­er, I don’t
        know how wide­ly that word is known, and of course au­ral­ly
        comix­ist is no bet­ter than comi­cist.



        Nonethe­less, sev­er­al pos­si­bil­i­ties along that line which you
        might con­sid­er are a comix­ist or a comix­er. Th­ese are not
        es­tab­lished terms, but they wouldn’t con­fuse most any­one hear­ing
        them.



        How­ev­er, in writ­ing it might be less than scin­til­lat­ing­ly
        clear whether a comix­er was a fan of com­ic books or some­one
        who co­öper­at­ed with one or more oth­ers in some sort of mix­ing
        project; that is, a co-mix­er.






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          1
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          1
          down vote



          accepted






          The clos­est we have to or­tho­graph­ic rules that could ap­ply
          here is that words end­ing in ‑c that get end­ings that start
          with e, i, or y must first add a k to pre­serve the sound.
          That’s why words like pic­nic and traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly be­come
          pic­nick­er and traf­fick­er re­spec­tive­ly.



          So you could cer­tain­ly have a comick­er.



          But words that take ‑ist don’t seem to care how they’re pro­nounced,
          so you wind up with phys­ics but phys­i­cist, lyrics but
          lyr­i­cist. Th­ese leads you down the un­pleas­ant path from comics to comi­cist, which
          I can­not blame you in the least for be­ing un­com­fort­able with. I am, too.



          What­ev­er you do, your main prob­lem is go­ing to be that with­out
          sup­port­ing con­text to prime your read­er, peo­ple won’t be sure
          whether you are talk­ing about hu­man co­me­di­ans or about graph­ic
          car­toons. This hap­pens al­ready with words like comi­cry, which
          is am­bigu­ous in this same way: it makes you won­der whether it
          is about lit­er­a­ture or the stage or the graph­ic arts.



          Com­ic books have on­ly been around by that name for a smidgen more
          than a cen­tu­ry, so you won’t be able to rope in old words. A
          com­i­car is a writ­er of come­dies, while co­mi­ces were a
          sort of Ro­man as­sem­bly, per­haps bet­ter known as co­mi­tia
          these days if they’re men­tioned at all.



          On­ly in 1913 did com­ic artists start to re­fer to those artists
          who ac­tu­al­ly drew comics. Then well be­fore the end of that
          cen­tu­ry, at­tribu­tive use such as com­ic col­lec­tors no longer
          raised any eye­brows.



          Al­so dur­ing the lat­ter­most parts of that same cen­tu­ry did
          comix come to mean an un­der­ground or counter‑cul­tur­al com­ic
          book in­tend­ed not for chil­dren but for adults. How­ev­er, I don’t
          know how wide­ly that word is known, and of course au­ral­ly
          comix­ist is no bet­ter than comi­cist.



          Nonethe­less, sev­er­al pos­si­bil­i­ties along that line which you
          might con­sid­er are a comix­ist or a comix­er. Th­ese are not
          es­tab­lished terms, but they wouldn’t con­fuse most any­one hear­ing
          them.



          How­ev­er, in writ­ing it might be less than scin­til­lat­ing­ly
          clear whether a comix­er was a fan of com­ic books or some­one
          who co­öper­at­ed with one or more oth­ers in some sort of mix­ing
          project; that is, a co-mix­er.






          share|improve this answer












          The clos­est we have to or­tho­graph­ic rules that could ap­ply
          here is that words end­ing in ‑c that get end­ings that start
          with e, i, or y must first add a k to pre­serve the sound.
          That’s why words like pic­nic and traf­fic reg­u­lar­ly be­come
          pic­nick­er and traf­fick­er re­spec­tive­ly.



          So you could cer­tain­ly have a comick­er.



          But words that take ‑ist don’t seem to care how they’re pro­nounced,
          so you wind up with phys­ics but phys­i­cist, lyrics but
          lyr­i­cist. Th­ese leads you down the un­pleas­ant path from comics to comi­cist, which
          I can­not blame you in the least for be­ing un­com­fort­able with. I am, too.



          What­ev­er you do, your main prob­lem is go­ing to be that with­out
          sup­port­ing con­text to prime your read­er, peo­ple won’t be sure
          whether you are talk­ing about hu­man co­me­di­ans or about graph­ic
          car­toons. This hap­pens al­ready with words like comi­cry, which
          is am­bigu­ous in this same way: it makes you won­der whether it
          is about lit­er­a­ture or the stage or the graph­ic arts.



          Com­ic books have on­ly been around by that name for a smidgen more
          than a cen­tu­ry, so you won’t be able to rope in old words. A
          com­i­car is a writ­er of come­dies, while co­mi­ces were a
          sort of Ro­man as­sem­bly, per­haps bet­ter known as co­mi­tia
          these days if they’re men­tioned at all.



          On­ly in 1913 did com­ic artists start to re­fer to those artists
          who ac­tu­al­ly drew comics. Then well be­fore the end of that
          cen­tu­ry, at­tribu­tive use such as com­ic col­lec­tors no longer
          raised any eye­brows.



          Al­so dur­ing the lat­ter­most parts of that same cen­tu­ry did
          comix come to mean an un­der­ground or counter‑cul­tur­al com­ic
          book in­tend­ed not for chil­dren but for adults. How­ev­er, I don’t
          know how wide­ly that word is known, and of course au­ral­ly
          comix­ist is no bet­ter than comi­cist.



          Nonethe­less, sev­er­al pos­si­bil­i­ties along that line which you
          might con­sid­er are a comix­ist or a comix­er. Th­ese are not
          es­tab­lished terms, but they wouldn’t con­fuse most any­one hear­ing
          them.



          How­ev­er, in writ­ing it might be less than scin­til­lat­ing­ly
          clear whether a comix­er was a fan of com­ic books or some­one
          who co­öper­at­ed with one or more oth­ers in some sort of mix­ing
          project; that is, a co-mix­er.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 2 hours ago









          tchrist

          108k28290463




          108k28290463
























              up vote
              0
              down vote













              Comicist from comics is no less valid a formation than physicist from physics, and, in fact, has been attempted before:




              Those who heard Mr. Andrews on Tuesday evening, have obtained a knowledge of the great literateur and comicist [Mark Twain] which would take weeks and months of rigorous study to accomplish … — Broadford Courier And Reedy Creek Times (Broadford VC), 24 July 1896.



              Up till now,' one of them writes, ' we did not know Puccini as a comicist except in some isolated examples … — The Musical Times 60 (1919), 138.




              Now Mark Twain is usually called a humorist and with Puccini, the word looks like a nonce creation to pair with dramatist. In any case, the word was not frequent enough to appear at its proper place, nestled between comices and comicly in volume 3 of the New English Dictionary, 1893.



              This is tantamount to hanging a “vacant” sign on the word and either waiting for a new lexical tenant or letting it fade away as so mainy failed coinages.



              A fanzine in the 1990s took up the word in the sense you envision and used it as the title:



              enter image description here



              Source



              For comicist to become a common designation for a comics author/writer/artist requires more than an ephemeral publication or a discussion on a website like this one. If, say, the late Stan Lee_ had casually referred to himself a few times in public as a comicist, then all the kids who drew comics on the back of their biology notebooks would want to grow up to be one. And a word is reborn.






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                Comicist from comics is no less valid a formation than physicist from physics, and, in fact, has been attempted before:




                Those who heard Mr. Andrews on Tuesday evening, have obtained a knowledge of the great literateur and comicist [Mark Twain] which would take weeks and months of rigorous study to accomplish … — Broadford Courier And Reedy Creek Times (Broadford VC), 24 July 1896.



                Up till now,' one of them writes, ' we did not know Puccini as a comicist except in some isolated examples … — The Musical Times 60 (1919), 138.




                Now Mark Twain is usually called a humorist and with Puccini, the word looks like a nonce creation to pair with dramatist. In any case, the word was not frequent enough to appear at its proper place, nestled between comices and comicly in volume 3 of the New English Dictionary, 1893.



                This is tantamount to hanging a “vacant” sign on the word and either waiting for a new lexical tenant or letting it fade away as so mainy failed coinages.



                A fanzine in the 1990s took up the word in the sense you envision and used it as the title:



                enter image description here



                Source



                For comicist to become a common designation for a comics author/writer/artist requires more than an ephemeral publication or a discussion on a website like this one. If, say, the late Stan Lee_ had casually referred to himself a few times in public as a comicist, then all the kids who drew comics on the back of their biology notebooks would want to grow up to be one. And a word is reborn.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  0
                  down vote









                  Comicist from comics is no less valid a formation than physicist from physics, and, in fact, has been attempted before:




                  Those who heard Mr. Andrews on Tuesday evening, have obtained a knowledge of the great literateur and comicist [Mark Twain] which would take weeks and months of rigorous study to accomplish … — Broadford Courier And Reedy Creek Times (Broadford VC), 24 July 1896.



                  Up till now,' one of them writes, ' we did not know Puccini as a comicist except in some isolated examples … — The Musical Times 60 (1919), 138.




                  Now Mark Twain is usually called a humorist and with Puccini, the word looks like a nonce creation to pair with dramatist. In any case, the word was not frequent enough to appear at its proper place, nestled between comices and comicly in volume 3 of the New English Dictionary, 1893.



                  This is tantamount to hanging a “vacant” sign on the word and either waiting for a new lexical tenant or letting it fade away as so mainy failed coinages.



                  A fanzine in the 1990s took up the word in the sense you envision and used it as the title:



                  enter image description here



                  Source



                  For comicist to become a common designation for a comics author/writer/artist requires more than an ephemeral publication or a discussion on a website like this one. If, say, the late Stan Lee_ had casually referred to himself a few times in public as a comicist, then all the kids who drew comics on the back of their biology notebooks would want to grow up to be one. And a word is reborn.






                  share|improve this answer












                  Comicist from comics is no less valid a formation than physicist from physics, and, in fact, has been attempted before:




                  Those who heard Mr. Andrews on Tuesday evening, have obtained a knowledge of the great literateur and comicist [Mark Twain] which would take weeks and months of rigorous study to accomplish … — Broadford Courier And Reedy Creek Times (Broadford VC), 24 July 1896.



                  Up till now,' one of them writes, ' we did not know Puccini as a comicist except in some isolated examples … — The Musical Times 60 (1919), 138.




                  Now Mark Twain is usually called a humorist and with Puccini, the word looks like a nonce creation to pair with dramatist. In any case, the word was not frequent enough to appear at its proper place, nestled between comices and comicly in volume 3 of the New English Dictionary, 1893.



                  This is tantamount to hanging a “vacant” sign on the word and either waiting for a new lexical tenant or letting it fade away as so mainy failed coinages.



                  A fanzine in the 1990s took up the word in the sense you envision and used it as the title:



                  enter image description here



                  Source



                  For comicist to become a common designation for a comics author/writer/artist requires more than an ephemeral publication or a discussion on a website like this one. If, say, the late Stan Lee_ had casually referred to himself a few times in public as a comicist, then all the kids who drew comics on the back of their biology notebooks would want to grow up to be one. And a word is reborn.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 48 mins ago









                  KarlG

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