Okay, throughout my (sentient) life I've used these two words--regime and regimen--in separate situations.
- I've read about the regime of Elizabeth I.
- I follow a workout regimen.
But I've noticed in my reading that other people use regime in the workout sentence I just wrote.
So ... as Bugs Bunny once asked--as Kenan Thompson sometimes sings on SNL--What up with that?" (Link to an SNL video.)
All right, see below what Merriam-Webster says about each word. Seems they are synonyms, at least in that meaning of a systematic plan.
I did a little further checking in the OED. And that sturdy source has this wee note of explanation: Regimen rather
than regime is now the usual word in
the United States and in Med.; in British English regime is more usual. The OED is referring to the definition of routine or regulation of aspects of life.
So ... it seems I am, indeed, an American!
I just entered "regimen or regime?" in Google and discovered that most grammar-gurus agree that they are synonyms. So there you go ...
We can now answer Kenan Thompson's "What's up ...?" with a good answer!
So ... it seems I am, indeed, an American!
I just entered "regimen or regime?" in Google and discovered that most grammar-gurus agree that they are synonyms. So there you go ...
We can now answer Kenan Thompson's "What's up ...?" with a good answer!
- regime:
-
a : regimen 1b : a regular pattern of occurrence or action (as of seasonal rainfall)2a : a method of ruling or management : a manner of administrationb : a form of government or administration<totalitarian regime>specifically : a governmental or social system<Nazi regime>c : the period during which a regime prevails3: the condition of a river with respect to the rate of its flow as measured by the volume of water passing different cross sections in a given time4: a fruiting cluster of the African oil palm
- regimena : a systematic plan (as of diet, therapeutic and sanitary measures, and medication) designed to improve and maintain the health of a patient or to control a particular ailmentb : a regulation or treatment intended to benefit by gradual operation2: governing, government, rule, administration3: government 5a4: the characteristic behavior or orderly procedure of a natural phenomenon or process (as of a river or a glacier)
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