Personally I am fanatical about collecting collocations, phrases and sentences for my writing. I heard this sentence while watching a documentary and I didn't hear it well.
The two words,
- centre: around <something>, focus, concentrate (on)
- centric: meal centric, experience centric
They are synonyms of each other. However I am unable to figure out the correct word choice and usage in the following sentence. Further in my understanding centric is quite unlikely to have a preposition "on". It sounds quite odd. Thus I feel "centring" would be the right usage/choice. Can you shed some light on this?
Sunday lunch is not simply about refueling but a relaxed communal experience centring on a well cooked meal.
or
Sunday lunch is not simply about refueling but a relaxed communal experience centric on a well cooked meal.
Best Answer
The sentence you didn't hear properly is:
A native speaker would not use centric on instead of centring on in the sentence. Secondly, the words are not synonyms unless they have or are used as the same part of speech.
Centric is an adjective. Centre (US: center) is a verb. It is also a noun. And nouns can be used as adjectives. Rarely, adjectives can be used as nouns (the poor). Therefore, unless the two words are being used as the same part of speech, they are not synonyms.
As a verb center/centre is quite often followed by on. See center on and the example sentences.
Since centre on can be part of a verb + particle combination, the use as a gerund centring on is not surprising.
We use gerunds to modify nouns all the time. You can also use a past particle as an adjective, as in:
One can use an adjective instead of the gerund (centring) or past particple (centred):
Central is a much more common adjective than centric. The use of centric to and centric on is hard to find. Central to is the overwhelming usage.
You can find examples of centric on using a google search in goole books, but almost all of them are false positives, such as
As for more on gerunds, the use of centric as an adjective, and how that is synonymous to the use of -centric, feel free to read the following.
Notice the noun menus followed by building up to a party. If one wanted, one could easily use centring on/around a party here.
The next sentence of my source is
Here, the the adjective centric is being used with meal to form the compound adjective meal-centric. A hyphen is often used when two adjectives are used as a compound adjective to desribe a noun, here program. Of course, meal is normally a noun, but like most nouns can be used as an adjective, as in meal ticket.
And this use of centric is synonymous to the suffix -centric, meaning "having a specified centre. A meal-centric program is a program whose specific center is that of a meal.