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Some Related Sentences

suffix and from
The two words may be derived from the same Indo-European form * ṇ-mṛ-to-: immortal ( n-: negative prefix equivalent to the prefix a-in both Greek and Sanskrit ; mṛ: zero grade of * mer-: to die ; and-to-: adjectival suffix ).
Meissner, and is derived from late Latin root ( which, in turn, comes from the Arabic al-qalwī – " ashes of plants ") and the suffix – " like ".
" Johnston took the-vril suffix from Bulwer-Lytton's then-popular " lost race " novel The Coming Race ( 1870 ), whose plot revolves around a superior race of people, the Vril-ya, who derive their powers from an electromagnetic substance named " Vril.
Its common name is derived from Tupi ka ' apiûara, a complex agglutination of kaá ( leaf ) + píi ( slender ) + ú ( eat ) + ara ( a suffix for agent nouns ), meaning " one who eats slender leafs ", or " grass-eater ".
For instance, the word photographer is derived from the word photograph by adding the derivational suffix -⟨ er ⟩.
With an adjectival or verbal root, the nominal suffix-o indicates an abstraction: parolo ( an act of speech, one's word ) from the verbal root paroli ( to speak ); belo ( beauty ) from the adjectival root bela ( beautiful ); whereas with a noun, the nominal suffix simply indicates the noun.
Some other, rarer, names for this alphabet are Bukvitsa ( from common Slavic word ' bukva ' meaning ' letter ', and a suffix '- itsa ') and Illyrian.
The word may derive from the word " jabber " (" to talk nonsense "), with the "- ish " suffix to signify a language ; alternatively, the term gibberish may derive from the eclectic mix of English, Spanish, Hebrew, Hindi and Arabic spoken in the British territory of Gibraltar ( from Arabic Gabal-Tariq, meaning Mountain of Tariq ), which is unintelligible to non-natives.
of " λεξικός " ( lexikos ), " of or for words ", from " λέξις " ( lexis ), " speech ", " word ", ( in turn from " λέγω " lego " to say ", " to speak ") + "- λογία ", (- logia ), " the study of ", a suffix derived from " λόγος " ( logos ), amongst others meaning " speech, oration, discourse, quote, study, calculation, reason ", it turn also from " λέγω ".
The term " Merovingian " comes from medieval Latin Merovingi or Merohingi (" sons of Merovech "), an alteration of an unattested Old West Low Franconian form, akin to their dynasty's Old English name Merewīowing, with the final-ing being a typical patronymic suffix.
Neurology ( from Greek, neuron, " nerve " + the suffix
* The name Nepal is also supposed to be derived from the Sanskrit word " NEP "( न े प ), with the suffix " AL " ( आल ) added to it ; though still under controversy, NEP were the people who used to be cow herders — the GOPALS ( ग ो प ा ल )— who came to the Nepal valley for the first time from the Ganges plain of India.
Tadema is an old Frisian patronymic ( meaning ' Adam-son ', the suffix ma being ' son of '), while the names Laurens and Alma came from his godfather.
The Segway PT ( PT is an initialism for personal transporter while the old suffix HT was an initialism for human transporter ) has electric motors powered by Valence Technology phosphate-based lithium-ion batteries which can be charged from household current.
The word trombone derives from Italian tromba ( trumpet ) and-one ( a suffix meaning " large "), so the name means " large trumpet ".
Tantra (, " loom, warp "; hence " principle, system, doctrine, theory ", from the verbal root " stretch, extend, expand ", and the suffix " instrument "), anglicised as tantrism or tantricism, is the name scholars give to a style of religious ritual and meditation that arose in medieval India no later than the fifth century CE, and which came to influence all forms of Indian religious expression to a greater or lesser degree.

suffix and Greek
In Latin, the Hebrew " ben " ( son of ) becomes the Greek − style suffix "- ides " to form " Moses Maimonides ".
" Therasia " and its ethnikon " Therasios " are both attested in later Greek ; and, since-sos was itself a genitive suffix in the Aegean Sprachbund, * Qeras could also shrink to * Qera.
This procedure, called a rhizotomy (" rhizo " meaning root and " tomy " meaning " a cutting of " from the Greek suffix ' tomia '), reduces spasms and allows more flexibility and control of the affected limbs and joints.
-logy is a suffix in the English language, used with words originally adapted from Ancient Greek language ending in (- logia ).
The suffix became productive in English from the 18th century, allowing the formation of new terms with no Latin or Greek precedent.
The English suffix has two separate main senses, reflecting two sources of the suffix in Greek:
In words of the type theology, the suffix is derived originally from (- log -) ( a variant of ,-leg -), from the Greek verb ( legein, " to speak ").
As with other classical compounds, adding the suffix to an initial word-stem derived from Greek or Latin may be used to lend grandeur or the impression of scientific rigor to humble pursuits, as in cosmetology (" the study of beauty treatment ") or cynology (" the study of dog training ").
The term derives from the Greek " δέρματος " ( dermatos ), genitive of " δέρμα " ( derma ), " skin " ( from " δέρω " – dero, " to flay ") + "- logy, " the study of ", a suffix derived from " λόγος " ( logos ), amongst others meaning " speech, oration, discourse, quote, study, calculation, reason ", in turn from " λέγω " – lego, " to say ", " to speak ".
" Hyperbaton " is a word borrowed from the Greek hyperbaton (), meaning " transposition ," which is derived from hyper (" over ") and bainein (" to step "), with the-tos verbal adjective suffix.
This originates from a medieval Latin suffix ‑ plus ( meaning " more ") related to Greek ‑ πλοῦς, which replaced the classical and late antique ‑ plex ( meaning " folded ").
('- poulos ' is a common Greek suffix in surnames, meaning " son of "; ' Stamato -' is the root ).
In Greek, the present stem often consists of the root with a suffix of y ( ι ˰ in Greek ).
According to Carl Darling Buck ( Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin ), the – eus suffix is typically used to form an agent noun, in this case from the aorist stem, pers -.
Anemone could not correctly be rendered as “ daughter of the wind ," for example, because the Greek suffix was not " exclusively patronymic ," and alpaca was not Arabic in origin, as Murray had written, but more likely Spanish.
The word demonym comes from the Greek word for " populace " ( demos ) with the suffix for " name " (- onym ).
Complex comes from the Latin com-plexus, meaning " braided together " ( co-+ plexus ), while symplectic comes from the corresponding Greek sym-plektikos ( συμπλεκτικός ); in both cases the suffix comes from the Indo-European root * plek -.
* Greek: υπερχοληστερολαιμία => " overmuch / high-cholesterol-blood +- ia ( neuter plural suffix )" meaning " hypercholesterolemia ", i. e. the presence of high levels of cholesterol in the blood.
), with a-lactone suffix and a Greek letter prefix that specifies the number of carbons in the heterocyle — that is, the distance between the relevant-OH and the-COOH groups along said backbone.
The English suffix-onym is from the Ancient Greek suffix ( ōnymon ), neuter of the suffix ( ōnymos ), having a specified kind of name, from the Greek ( ónoma ), Aeolic Greek ὄνυμα ( ónyma ), " name ".

suffix and indicates
* The-oside suffix indicates that the anomeric carbon of both monosaccharides participates in the glycosidic bond.
The suffix “ ene ” indicates that each C atom is covalently bonded to three others ( instead of the maximum of four ), a situation that classically would correspond to the existence of bonds involving two pairs of electrons (“ double bonds ”).
It indicates when a player should " blow " or " draw " on a note by appending a letter suffix ( B for blow or D for draw ) to the appropriate harmonica hole number.
A passive suffix on the verb indicates passive voice.
The historic counties of England — red indicates "- shire " counties, orange indicates where the "- shire " suffix is occasionally used
suffix, thus indicates the number of years since the emperor's coronation in 632 AD.
the " gate " suffix derives from Old Norse gata meaning road and kirk, from kirkja indicates there was a church.
The suffix HE or EE indicates a high-efficiency / energy-efficiency model having a lower TDP than a standard Opteron.
The suffix SE indicates a top-of-the-line model having a higher TDP than a standard Opteron.
The suffix indicates that we are following the motion of a fluid particle.
A ' p ' suffix indicates a peculiar galaxy that does not fit cleanly into the classification scheme ; in this case, the peculiarity is caused by the presence of a relativistic jet emerging from the core.
In Catch 22 the author introduces Yossarian as a soldier in WWII with an Assyrian heritage, even though his name indicates an Armenian background because of the " ian " suffix.
( double-verb where the second verb, " break ", is a suffix to the first, and indicates what happens to the object as a result of the action.
For rebroadcasters which use a numeric suffix, the suffixes usually follow a 1 – 2 – 3 numeric sequence which indicates the chronological order in which rebroadcast transmitters were added.
The name Chagford is derived from the word chag, meaning gorse or broom, and the ford suffix indicates its importance as a crossing place on the River Teign.
Where the suffix indicates that the units are 512-byte blocks.
The root Eloah אלה is a feminine noun, meaning goddess, also used in poetry and late prose ( e. g. the Book of Job ) and ending with the masculine plural suffix "- im " ים creating a word that indicates a plurality of both masculine and feminine essences yet in a singular identity " G-d ".
* A suffix of a lower-case letter a, b, or c indicates increasingly unsymmetrical isomers.
The " a " suffix indicates that the isomer is unbalanced by one atom, giving 1, 1, 1, 2-Tetrafluoroethane.
Starting from Ssanggyesa ( the sa suffix indicates a Buddhist temple ), the peak can be reached in 4 hours at a steady pace.
As a suffix, it indicates his children, grandchildren, and / or grandchildren

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