empirice
From LSJ
Dante Alighieri, Paradiso, XXXIII, v. 145
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
empīrĭce: ēs (-ca, ae, Marc. de Med. 6), f., = ἐμπειρική,
I empiricism in medicine, i. e. a system founded wholly on practice, Plin. 29, 1, 4, § 5.—Hence, empīrĭcus, i, m., an empiric, a physician whose knowledge of medicine is derived from experience only, Cic. Ac. 2, 39, 122 (in Cels. praef. and 5 init., written as Greek); their writings were called empīrĭca, ōrum, n., Plin. 20, 12, 48, § 120.
Latin > German (Georges)
empīricē, ēs, f. (εμπειρική, verst. τέχνη), die auf bloße Erfahrung sich gründende Heilkunde, das Erfahrungswissen, die Empirie, Plin. 29, 5.
Latin > Chinese
empirice, es. f. :: 無學之醫業