odic

Adjective

 * 1) Of or pertaining to odes.
 * 2) * 1964, Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin, Vladimir Nabokov (translator and author of comments), Eugene Onegin: A Novel in Verse: Commentary,
 * Both the French odic stanza and the EO stanza are related to the sonnet.
 * Both the French odic stanza and the EO stanza are related to the sonnet.

Etymology 2
From, modelled after 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1) * 1878 July, George Miller Beard, The Scientific Study of Human Testimony, Part III, in Popular Science Monthly, Volume 13:
 * Such was the origin of the delusions of "animal magnetism," and "odic" and "psychic" force—claims that belong to cerebro-physiology, a department of science that is now but just passing out of the territorial into the organized stage.
 * 1) * 1878 July, George Miller Beard, The Scientific Study of Human Testimony, Part III, in Popular Science Monthly, Volume 13:
 * Such was the origin of the delusions of "animal magnetism," and "odic" and "psychic" force—claims that belong to cerebro-physiology, a department of science that is now but just passing out of the territorial into the organized stage.