historio-
combining form occurring in Greek (cf. Gr. ἱστοριογραϕία historiography) and now used to an increasing extent in English, as historio-cultural, historio-patriotic, historio-pœic adjs.
| 1958 W. Stark Sociology of Knowledge iv. 169 The historio-cultural sciences. |
| 1967 Listener 16 Feb. 237/2 The story was tedious and repetitive as modern Russian historio-patriotic writing sometimes can be. |
| 1953 Antiquity XXVII. 97 The abstract, age-long yearning of the Jewish nation in the Diaspora..found its historiopoeic expression in written history and poetry. |