CLA 30 FINALE
republic
509-31 BCE
quinary
5th
quintus
5th
senary
6th
sextus
6th
monarchy
753-509 BCE
septenary
7th
septimus
7th
octavus
8th
octonary
8th
nonary
9th
nonus
9th
robots
< Czech, coined by Karel Čapek in the play R.U.R. (1920) from the base robot-, as in robota compulsory labor, robotník peasant owing such labor
amazon
< Latin Amazon, < Greek Ἀμαζών, -όνα; explained by the Greeks < ἀ priv. + μαζ-ός a breast (in connection with the fable that they destroyed the right breast so as not to interfere with the use of the bow), but probably pop. etym. of an unknown foreign word.
parallel clauses
joined with coordinating conjunctions AKA coordinate clauses
arthropod
joint foot
jovial
joyous, good-spirited
cide
kill
genus
kind
rex, regis
king
priam
king of troy
regalis
kingly
geo
land, earth
magni
large
larynx/laryng/laryngo
larynx (upper part of the windpipe)
postumus
last
horizon
late 14c., orisoun, from Old French orizon (14c., Modern French horizon), earlier orizonte (13c.), from Latin horizontem (nominative horizon), from Greek horizon kyklos "bounding circle," from horizein "boundary limit, divide, separate," from horos "boundary." The h- was restored 17c. in imitation of Latin. Old English used eaggemearc ("eye-mark") for "limit of view, horizon."
uni
latin cardinal 1
dec/deci/decem
latin cardinal 10
cent/centi
latin cardinal 100
mill/milli
latin cardinal 1000
du/bi
latin cardinal 2
tri
latin cardinal 3
quadru/quadri/quadr
latin cardinal 4
qinqu/qinque
latin cardinal 5
sex
latin cardinal 6
sept/septem
latin cardinal 7
octo/octi
latin cardinal 8
nov/novem
latin cardinal 9
i
latin combining vowel
primus
latin ordinal 1st
stella
latin star
legalis
law
astronomy
law of the stars; the branch of science that deals with celestial objects, space, and the physical universe as a whole
strati/strato
layer
duc, duct
lead
duce/duct
lead, take
phyllo
leaf
linqu
leave
desert verb
leave or abandon
meio/mio
less(en)
caveat emptor
let the buyer beware
caveat scriptor
let the signer beware
bio
life
zo
life: the earlier life age: the phase of earlier life; animal
lumin
light
similat
like
1738
linnaeus returns to southern sweden, where his career expands
leon
lion
zodion
little image, sign
asterisk
little star
ion
little thing
sauru
lizard
spic, spect
look at, see
clipped words
look like bases, but are really _ forms EX. mono, bi, semi, quad, quint, mob, etc.
solve, solut
loosen
amatum
loved
supine
lying facing upward
prone
lying on one's stomach
stentor
someone with a loud voice; communications director of the acheans
titanic
something awesome and powerful like the Titans
quid pro quo
something for something
trojan horse
something treacherous
adopt
something we choose it for ourselves
paris, alexandros
son of priam
psycho
soul, mind
species name
specific name = species epithet = specific epithet
helix, helico
spiral, curved
schizo
split
schism
split in church
lymph
spring water. liquid in the body
stationary
standing without moving
asteroid
star-like
astronaut
star-sailor
astral
starry
ion
state or action (noun suffix)
statio
station
firm
steady, stable
gress
step, move
hes/her
stick
extant
still standing up or existing
persephone
stolen by hades
gaster/gastro
stomach
epoch
stopping point
ortho
straight, upright, correct
col
strain
tend, tent, tens
stretch
compet
strive in competition with someone, be qualified to strive
word order
structure depends partly on function words and ___
logy
study of
astrology
study of the stars; ; the study of the movements and relative positions of celestial bodies interpreted as having an influence on human affairs and the natural world
syntactical test for verbs
subject-verb-object
psychosis, psychotic
suffering irritation of soul. makes you believe things that aren't true.
patho
suffering, disease, feeling
ate
suffix
ote, ota
suffixes that arose in modern bioscience and ultimately go back to Greek suffixes
helion, elion
sun
helios
sun
solstice (solstitium)
sun-stop
drom
swim, run
mens
table
sume
take
logo
talk, words
sap/sip
taste
pro tempore
temporarily
modern religions
tend to be about beliefs; depends largely on scriptures
consider
think carefully about (something), typically before making a decision
terti
third
noun markers as pronouns
this, that, some, many
jupiter
thor
mito
thread
mitochondrion
thread granule little thing
per
through
triassic
through Latin from Greek trias, which means triad / group of 3
dia
through, between
ject
throw
object
throw against
chron, chrono
time
tempus fugit
time escapes; time flies
mars
tiwe
saint valentine
valentine; saint whose name is connected with lovers and sweethearts
allomorphs
variant forms of morphemes that have the same meaning
velat
veil, cover
ven
vein
transitive verbs
verbs that do have an object
intransitive verbs
verbs that do not take an object
magnanimous
very generous or forgiving, especially toward a rival or someone less powerful than oneself
medieval
very old; too old to be useful or acceptable
partheno
virgin
ambula
walk
grade/gress
walk
mur
wall
err
wander
plankt
wander
planets
wandering stars
lu/luv/lut
wash
hydro
water
litera
water
period
way around = one trip around = one stage of a larger whole
route
way that is rough and broken
pluto
wealth
climatic
weather conditions in a given zone
salutatory
welcoming
humid
wet
dogma
what is deemed correct
literal
when it has its etymological meaning EX. root of the plant
plasmogamy
when the cytoplasm of two cells merge
morphological test for verbs
when the time tense can change ex. walked and walk
karyogamy
when two nuclei merge into one, such as when the nucleus of a sperm merges with that of an egg.
elysian fields
where all the heroes hangout
leuco, leuko
white
holo
whole
olos
whole
pter
wing
ptero
wing
cum grano salis
with a grain of salt
vice versa
with the change having been changed
ex cathedra
with the full authority of office
syn, same
with, same, together
intra
within
sine die
without a definite date
a, an
without, not
extra
without, outside
mercury
woden
hyster
womb
verb
word
quartus
4th
quaternary
4th
assault
a leap
inter nos
between us
inter
between, among
ultra
beyond
preter
beyond, more than
brother
bhratar (sanskrit), frater (Latin), phrater (Greek)
magni
big
ornitho
bird
nat
birth
gen
birth, come to be
melano
black
culpable
blameworty
braille
blind teacher in France who invented a system of printing for the blind consisting of a pattern of raised dots
hema, ema
blood
cyano
blue
sir robert peel
bobbies; reorganized the police force in Great Britain
somat, soma, some
body
repression
body bushes back memories
necro
corpse
equinox
equal-night
california
eureka, athena, 31 stars
histories
events arranged around a narrative
annals
events arranged by year
chronicles
events arranged chronological
biweekly
every other week, every 2 weeks
phanero
evident, visible, apparent
adulation
excessive display of admiration
compulsion
excessively pushed to do
climactic
exciting or thrilling and acting as a climax to a series of events
1732
expedition to Lapland
lethargy
extreme tiredness
draconian
extremely severe (7th century BCE)
ei
ey; "they"
ai
eye
glori
fame
george
farmer, an earth worker (< {geo} + {org(o)/ erg(o)} = work)
pater/patri
father
apprehensive
fearful
path
feeling or emotion
esthes, aesthest
feeling, sensation
febri
fever
proto
first
primus inter pares
first among equals
principal
first or most important
ichthy(o)
fish
pisci
fish
apt
fit, fasten
flu
flow
rrhea
flow, discharge
alti
high
oid
similar to
mono
single
monophyly
single-tribe-ness
sess
sit
tantalus
sitting in water with apple on head can't eat or drink
squirrel
skia (shadow), oura (tail)
derm
skin
uranus
sky
laps
slip, fall
terra firma
solid ground, earth
officious
someone who offers unnecessary and unwanted services
cassandra
someone who predicts doom but not believed; apollo wanted to make love with her, but she refused
rrhea
flowing, discharge
sequ
follow
pus/pod
foot
per capita
for heads
pro bono
for the public good
pro forma
for the sake of form; done as a formality
ad hoc
for this; for the particular task at hand
pro
for, in place of
eidos
form; visual image; species
summum bonum
highest good
junct
join
neo
new
greek cardinal 6
ἕξ
h.w. fowler on miocene
"A typical example of the monstrosities with which scientific men in want of a label for something, and indifferent to all beyond their own province, defile the language. The elements of the word are Greek, but not the way they are put together, nor the meaning demanded of the compound." EX. T-rex, polyamory
north carolina
"Virtute enim ipsa non tam multi praediti esse quam videri volunt." "Not nearly so many people want actually to be possessed of virtue as want to appear to be possessed of it."
gen
"bringing into existence," "coming into existence"
aristotle
"man is a political animal"
recidivist
"relapsed criminal," 1880, from French récidiviste, from récidiver "to fall back, relapse," from Medieval Latin recidivare "to relapse into sin," from Latin recidivus "falling back," from recidere "fall back," from re- "back, again" (see re- ) + comb. form of cadere "to fall" (see case (n.)). Recidivation in the spiritual sense is attested from early 15c., was very common 17c.
estro
"sexual receptivity," "heat"
pandemonium
'Greek;'"[realm'of]'all'demons"'
Miocene Epoch
(10-25 million years ago) epoch < Latin epocha < Greek ἐποχή (stopping point) "the less-new epoch"
morphological test for adjectives
(er) and (est) -> more and most
literally
...informal used for emphasis or to express strong feeling while not being literally true: I have received literally thousands of letters.
species plantarum/genera plantarum
1753, 1754: starting point of modern botanical nomenclature
serendipity
1754: Persian fairytale, whose heroes were always making discoveries, by accidents and sagacity, of things they were not in quest of.
portmanteau
1. a large suitcase 2. a word or morpheme whose form and meaning are derived from a blending of two or more distinct forms
supereon
1. largest span of time
religio
1. reverence/fear of the gods 2. a religious ceremony
decimus
10th
denary
10th
NONE
11th
idiot
1250-1300; Middle English<Latin<Greek private person, layman, person lacking skill or expertise. idio- + stratiotes (professional soldier)
duodenary
12th
trivial
1400-50; late Middle English < Latin belonging to the crossroads or street corner. tri- + vi (a road).
paraphernalia
1470-80; < Medieval Latin paraphernālia (bona) a bride's goods, beyond her dowry, equivalent to Late Latin paraphern (a) a bride's property (< Greek parápherna, equivalent to para- para-1+ phern (ḗ) dowry, derivative of phérein to bear1+ -a neuter plural noun suffix) + Latin -ālia, noun use of neuter plural of -ālis -al1
assassin
1530s from, via French and Italian, from Arabic from hashish. A fanatical Ismalli Muslim sect of the time of the Crusades. With a reputation for murdering opposing leaders after intoxicating themselves by eating hashish.
calculate
1560-70; < Late Latin calculātus reckoned (past participle of calculāre), equivalent to calculus pebble (see calculus ) + -ātus -ate1
systema naturae
1735, 10th ed. 1758: starting point for modern biological nomenclature
influenza
1743, borrowed during an outbreak of the disease in Europe, from Italian influenza "influenza, epidemic," originally "visitation, influence (of the stars)," from Medieval Latin influentia (see influence ). Used in Italian for diseases since at least 1504 (cf. influenza di febbre scarlattina "scarlet fever") on notion of astral or occult influence. The 1743 outbreak began in Italy. Often applied since mid-19c. to severe colds.
OK
1839, only survivor of a slang fad in Boston and New York c.1838-9 for abbreviations of common phrases with deliberate, jocular misspellings (e.g. K.G. for "no go," as if spelled "know go;" N.C. for "'nuff ced;" K.Y. for "know yuse"). In the case of O.K., the abbreviation is of "oll korrect." Probably further popularized by use as an election slogan by the O.K. Club, New York boosters of Democratic president Martin Van Buren's 1840 re-election bid, in allusion to his nickname Old Kinderhook, from his birth in the N.Y. village of Kinderhook. Van Buren lost, the word stuck, in part because it filled a need for a quick way to write an approval on a document, bill, etc. Spelled out as okeh, 1919, by Woodrow Wilson, on assumption that it represented Choctaw okeh "it is so" (a theory which lacks historical documentation); this was ousted quickly by okay after the appearance of that form in 1929. Greek immigrants to America who returned home early 20c. having picked up U.S. speech mannerisms were known in Greece as okay-boys, among other things.
primary
1st
eon
2. Greek - age
proterozoic eon
2500 to _
secondary
2nd
secundus
2nd
era
3. Latin - fixed date
empire
31 BCE - 5th CE
archaean eon
3800 to 2500 (from Greek archaeo = which means old, original
tertiary
3rd
tertius
3rd
hadean eon
4500 to 3800 (from Greek Hades) (Earth was volcanic and was bombarded by meteors and so it was "hellish")
oats
A grain, which in England is generally given to horses, but in Scotland appears to support the people
cardinal number
A number, such as 3 or 11 or 412, used in counting to indicate quantity but not order
period before linnaeus
A tradition of close observation of nature replaces scholasticism and the almost exclusive use of literary sources in natural history
lexicographer
A writer of dictionaries; a harmless drudge that busies himself in tracing the original, and detailing the significance of words
River Styx
Achilles' mother dipped Achilles But she held him by the ankles so he was not protected there. He died at Troy from an arrow shot into his heel.
US English
American dictionaries cover the English of the United States.
2012
Anatolian Hypothesis: that PIE spread with the expansion of agriculture in 9000-8500 BCE
rich as croesus
Croesus, the King of Lydia, 560-546 BCE was known for extreme wealth
virginia
Dame Virtus knocks out and down Sir Tyrant: Sic Semper Tyrannis = 'Thus always to Tyrants'
devonian
Devon, a region in southwestern England, where the rocks characterized the period
cambrian explosion
Diverse forms of life evolved during this period including trilobites
person
Early 13c., from Old French persone "human being, anyone, person" (12c., Modern French personne) and directly from Latin persona "human being, person, personage; a part in a drama, assumed character," originally "mask, false face," such as those of wood or clay worn by the actors in later Roman theater.
discombobulated
English; humorous alteration of discompose, discomfort, or discomfit
cynosure
Etymology: < French cynosure (16th cent.), < Latin cynosūra, < Greek κυνόσουρα dog's tail, Ursa Minor.
cynic
Etymology: < Latin cynicus (perhaps in part through French; compare cinicque , 1521 in Hatzfeld & Darmesteter), < Greek κυνικός dog-like, currish, churlish, Cynic, < κύων , κυνός dog: see -ic suffix. In the appellation of the Cynic philosophers there was probably an original reference to the κυνόσαργες, a gymnasium where Antisthenes taught; but popular use took it simply in the sense 'dog-like, currish', so that κύων 'dog' became a nickname for 'Cynic'.
1500
Europeans started traveling regularly to India
content words
Ex. recent, emphasis, high, interest, rates. Usually derived from Greek or Latin.
function words
Ex. with, the, on. Short words which serve as cement to hold the content words together.
carl linnaeus
Father of Modern Biological Taxonomy
charon
Ferryman Transports souls across the river Styx/Acheron
finding polaris
First locate Ursa Major aka The Big Dipper
middle english
Form used from A.D. 1100 to A.D. 1500
claudius ptolemy
Formulated a complex and accurate geocentric model; mathematician produced the most extensive astronomical model in anMquity
poseidon
God of the sea and earthquakes
kary, cary
Greek morpheme for "nut"
ine
Greek morpheme used to name basic chemicals
in
Greek morpheme used to name neutral chemicals
psyche
Greek word for soul. It means breath.
cosmos
Greek word means "order" or "adornment"
alchemist
Greek:'' - From'"Khem"'='"Egypt"'from'the'EgypBan'language?'' - From'{chym}'='' ' ''''='[plant]'juice?'
paradigm
Greek; example
punch
Hindi,'Sanskrit;'"drink'with'five' ingredients"'
1761
Name after ennoblement - Carl von Linne
neologisms
How spoken words make it into the standard dictionary
credo
I believe
amavi
I have loved
amo
I love
cyto
In Greek, means vessel. In modern biology, means cell.
International
International Dictionaries seek to cover the English of all English speakers in the world.
deprecated
It means that official scientific bodies have rejected the term EX. tertiary period
jurassic
Jura mountains, where the rocks characterized the period
peleus
King of the Myrmidons and eventually father of Achilles
anima
Latin for breath, life-force
animus
Latin for conscious, emotional mind
dissect
Latin for dis = apart. Latin for sect = cut
genius
Latin for guardian spirit
nucleus
Latin word meaning "kernel," the inner part of a nut
hybrid
Latin; offspring of a tame sow and wild boar.
lurid
Latin; pale yellow, ghastly
scintilla
Latin; spark, tiny trace
decimate
Latin;'"punish'[kill]'every'tenth'person"'
lunatic
Latinn:'"moonstruck"'
habeas corpus
May you have the body; protection against illegal imprisonment
appositives
Nouns that follow other nouns and describe them
ordovician
Ordovices, an ancient people in northern Wales, where the rocks characterized the period
chaos
Originally, it does not mean "confusion"; it means "vacuum," "nothingness."
post meridiem
P.M. , after midday
permian
Perm, Russia, where the rocks characterized the period
demeter
Persophone's mother and goddess of the harvest
silurian
Silures, an ancient people who inhabited the regions of Wales, where the rocks characterized the period
tenochtitlan
Spaniards conquered this, but went on to become what has been called the first "globalized city": Mexico City.
anatolia
Specialists in the study of biological phylogenetics applied methods used to construct phylogenetic trees and map the spread of organisms. They concluded that the homeland of the Proto- Indo-Europeans was most likely in Anatolia.
stratigraphy
Study of Geological "Layers"
indo-european
The Indians had their own classical language, Sanskrit, from which many North Indian languages have arisen, and the similarities between it and Greek and Latin were striking
corpus delicti
body of the crime; concrete evidence of a crime
anglo-saxon
The earliest form of written records. A.D. 400 to A.D. 1100 AKA. Old English
oste
bone
unabridged
The fullest, most comprehensive dictionaries
consul, consulis
consul
Descriptive
These describe how people use words, without making judgments about what is correct or incorrect
Prescriptive
These prescribe (give advice) on how to use words
creed
formal statement of belief In Christianity, the most important beliefs
ive
forms adjectives (and nouns based on adjectives)
pro
forward
quater
fourth
pharmacon
This is a word of mysterious origin, probably borrowed from non-Greeks.
ingenuous
free born, of noble birth
firmamnet
heaven
gravis
heavy
grav
heavy, serious, pregnant
cerberus
Three Headed Dog Guards the Entrance to the Underworld
the day of the dead
Three day celebration (October 31- November 2) originating in Pre-Columbian Mexico.
hercules
hera's glory; taken wrath by Hera
history
Traces back to Greek. historia < historein Etymological meaning = inquiry
hector
Trojan Champion, son of Priam; kills patroclus
combining form
contains a base in a form in which it can be combined with another base or other bases to create words with two or more bases
reservation, ethical hesitation
What does scruple mean today?
assimilation
When the last letter of a prefix becomes the same as the first letter of the base
athlet
contest, athlete
hesiod
Wrote the Theogony (the geneaology of gods) and Works and Days, which deals with farming, astronomy, meteorology and mythology
ginta
X 10
ad
_ assimilates
pteranodon
a "wing-no-tooth"
persona non grata
a (legally) unwelcome person
illusion
a belief not in accord with the facts
eu
a blend of e and u
clade
a branch of the tree of life
inflection
a change in word form that affects the word's function without changing its class (bake, bakes, baked)
tabula rasa
a clean slate
antipasto
a course of appetizers consisting of an assortment of foods
per diem
a daily allowance
gonorrhea
a disease of the sex organs that is spread by sexual contact
dystrophy
a disorder in which an organ or tissue of the body wastes away
venery
a fancy term for hunting
euphoria
a feeling or state of intense excitement and happiness
combining form
a form a base takes to combine with another base
monarchy
a form of government with a monarch at the head
chauvin
a general notorious for his unreasoning of the lost cause of Napoleon
mesmer
a german physician who experimented with hypnotism
deus ex machina
a god on the crane
magnum opus
a great work
constellation
a group of stars
sandwich
a keen gambler that would not leave the gambling table to eat but had a special fast food item brought to him
centrifuge
a machine with a rapidly rotating container that applies centrifugal force to its contents, typically to separate fluids of different densities or liquids from solids
frankenstein
a medical student in a novel by Mary Shelley, wife of the poet. the student created a monster who eventually killed him
lunatic
a mentally ill person
prefix
a morpheme that occurs at the front of the word
Norvus Ordo Seclorum
a new order of the ages
fraction
a numerical quantity that is not a whole number
official
a person put in some position of authority
geriatricians
a physician who has completed a residency in either Internal Medicine or Family Medicine with an additional one or two year fellowship training in the medical, social, and psychological issues that concern older adults
gaea
a poetic variant of γῆ (= Earth), from which {ge(o)} comes.
altercation
a quarrel with another person
academy
a school or learned society (Plato's _)
thetis
a sea nymph; he learns that her child will be greater than his father
gonad
a sex organ that produces sperm or eggs : a testicle or an ovary
oligarchy
a small group of people having control of a country, organization, or institution
ostracize
a small piece of pottery (potsherd or tile) used in ostracism. used in votes
votum
a solemn promise; a vow; a votive offering; a desire, wish, or prayer
aster
a star-shaped flower
myth
a story about the past (and/or the gods) with collective importance; it can be told in a number of different ways
myth
a story about the past with collective importance
desire
a strong feeling of wanting to have something or wishing for something to happen
patriarchy
a system of society or government in which the father or eldest male is head of the family and descent is traced through the male line
matriarchy
a system of society or government ruled by a woman or women
principle
a theory or a standard or a important rule or guideline
suffrage
a voting tablet (ballot), a vote, the right to vote
achilles heel
a weak spot or vulnerability
nestor
a wise old man; a wise old man who advised the acheans
martyr
a witness
jingoism
an attitude of belligerent nationalism, the English equivalent of the term chauvinism. The term apparently originated in England during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 when the British Mediterranean squadron was sent to Gallipoli to restrain Russia and war fever was aroused. Supporters of the British government's policy toward Russia came to be called jingoes as a result of the phrase "by jingo," which appeared in the refrain of a popular song:We don't want to fight, yet by jingo, if we do,We've got the ships, we've got the men,And got the money, too!
oecumene
an ecumenical council
agile
able to move quickly and easily
oma
abnormal swelling
dysfunction
abnormality or impairment in the function of a specified bodily organ or system
super
above
hyper
above, excessive, too much
de facto
according to fact (in fact, in reality)
de iure/de jure
according to law; legally
de jure
according to the law
patroclus
achilles lover, his cousin, protector and intimate friend/lover
trans
across
ion
act of
ment
act of
exodus
act of leaving a place
ure
action or result of action
ion
action, condition caused by an action
toward
ad/ac/af/ag/al/an/ap/as/at
morphological test for adverbs
add -ly to adjectives**
morphological test for nouns
adding (s) to the end as a suffix to make it plural
sardonic
adj. "apparently but not really proceeding from gaiety," 1630s, from French sardonique (16c.), from Latin sardonius (but as if from Latin *sardonicus) in Sardonius risus, loan-translation of Greek sardonios (gelos) "of bitter or scornful (laughter)," altered from Homeric sardanios (of uncertain origin) by influence of Sardonios "Sardinian," because the Greeks believed that eating a certain plant they called sardonion (literally "plant from Sardinia," see Sardinia ) caused facial convulsions resembling those of sardonic laughter, usually followed by death. For nuances of usage, see humor. Earlier in same sense sardonian (1580s), from Latin sardonius. Related: Sardonically.
tos
adjective ending
counsel
advice (noun); lawyer, legal advisor; advise (verb)
ai
ae
post mortem
after death
posthumous
after death
meta
after, among, changing
post
after, behind
contra
against
greek anti
against
ob
against
anti, ant
against, opposite
ob/of
against, toward
aev, ev
age
or
agent, doer
omni
all, every
prefixes
alter the meaning of bases without fundamentally changing it
adam sedgwick
an 19th century geologist who carefully examined the rock formations of England
spooner
an English clergyman known for his unintentional transposing of sounds like "our queer old Dean" in place of "our dear old Queen"
linguistic paleontology
an approach in which terms reconstructed in the ancestral "proto-language" are used to make inferences about its speakers' culture and environment
council
an assembly or advisory group of people
anthropocene
an informal geologic chronological term that serves to mark the evidence and extent of human activities that have had a significant global impact on the Earth's ecosystems
eukaryote
an organism with genuine nuclei in its cells
persona non grata
an unacceptable person
adamant
an unbeatable substance; may have meant "steel," became, through a complicated history, our word "diamond." It also gives us the English word "_," which means "unyielding," "inflexible."
geocentric
ancient astronomical system; the prevailing model of the universe in antiquity
zo
animal
zoon
animal, image
annual, yearly
annalis (Latin adjective)
alter ego
another I; second personality
syntactical test for adverbs
answers "how?" "when?" "where?"**
psychic
anything that pertains to the soul
dis/dif
apart
circa/c/ca
approximately
circum
around
amphi
around, both
peri
around, near
quire
ask, seek
ex
assimilates (only) before bases starting with -f
Ad
assimilates before c/f/g/l/n/p/s/t
Con
assimilates before l/m
in
assimilates before m/l/r
sub
assimilates before m/p
ob
assimilates before p
prima facie
at first sight; self-evident
alias
at other times
au
au
di
away
dementia
away from mind
de
away from, off, down wholly, reverse the action of
apo, ap, aph
away from, without
dis
away, apart
se
away, apart
di/dis/dif
away, away from
polos
axis
retro
back
palin, pali
back, again
re
back, again
re
back, backwards, again
disaster
bad star
sphera
ball
etymo
basic meaning of a word
baptism
bathe, wash, drench
gen
be born, to be born with
stup
be motionless
arctos
bear
fructiferous
bearing or producing fruit
christianity
became official religion of the roman empire in the fourth century CE
ante
before
italian anti
before
pre
before
anti meridiem
before midday
hysteria
behaving in an uncontrolled way because of your emotions "wandering womb"
polytheists
belief in many gods EX. Greeks
henotheism
belief in many gods, but worship of only one
atheism
belief in no gods
monotheists
belief in one god EX. Modern Jews, Christians, Muslims
animism
belief that all natural objects have their own souls
infra
below
flex
bend
para
beside
paraphyly
beside-tribe-ness
inter
between
parameter
boundary, limit, framework, or condition
toco
bow
toxicon
bow poison
thomas bowdler
bowdlerizing; edited a heavily censored version of Shakespeare
captain cc boycott
boycott; on the other side of the question of land reform from his neighbors in Ireland. they refused to have any dealings with him
clad
branch
frag
break
frang/fract
break
rupt
break
analyze
break down words
pons
bridge
laconic
brief, pithy, concise
ether
bright sky above ordinary air
phy
bring forth, bear, grow
blast
bud or sprout
raise
build it
ipso facto
by the fact/act itself
ex officio
by virtue of your position
syntactical test for adjectives
can be written between noun marker and noun ex. "these" _ "apples" & these dogs seem _.
cure
care
fer
carry
sculpt
carve
casus belli
cause of war
psychosomatic
caused by mental or emotional problems
cretaceous
chalky or made of chalk. extensive chalk deposits of southeastern england were formed
alteration
change from one thing to another
suffixes
change the class of a word
mercurial
changeable
schizoid
changing frequently between opposite states
The International Stratigraphic Commission
charge of naming geological ages
cycle
circle
polis
citadel, city. "body of citizens"
civis
citizen
polites
citizen
civitas
citizenship, a city
urbs, urbis
city
constantine 1
claimed conversion to christianity
medieval classification
classification of organisms tended to be scholastic, that is, it relied on scholarly traditoon (writen works) and did not rely on observation.
protozoa
classified as the first animals. They were considered animals of only one cell. (They are no longer considered animals.)
subordinate clauses
clauses that are not a complete sentence
adjective clauses
clauses that can describe nouns
carboniferous
coal-producing. the great coal deposits of europe were formed at this time
chromat
color
vene, vent
come
invent
come upon, find
vade mecum
come with me!; a thing constantly carried
cess
come, go
martial
comes from Latin name Mars, the Roman god of war. Means warlike.
imperator/imperatoris
commander, emperor (emperor)
intens
commotion
sis
condition, abnormal condition
myth complex
conglomerate of various versions
alimentary
connected with food
medic
connected with the science of medicine
al
connected with, pertaining to
subordinating conjunctions
connects things of lower rank (dependent clauses) to things of higher rank (usually independent clauses)
damant
conquerable
orthodox
conservative, ordinary
clause
consists of a subject (what the sentence is about) and a predicate (what is said about it)
specific epithets
constructed, according to the rules of Latin, to describe the genus, which is a noun. In Latin, adjectives often follow their nouns
apocalyp
cover
sanguinary
covered with blood; cruel, bloodthirsty
lunate
crescent-shaped
new mexico
crescit eundo (it grows as it goes). Taken from Lucretius' description of a thunderbolt
rout
crushing defeat
tom
cut
zodiac
cycle
stygian
dark, gloomy
aphrodite
daughter of zeus; goddess of desire and sex; only god who regularly sleeps with zeus
lethal
deadly
Kleos Aphthiton
deathless glory; He recounts a choice his mother Thetis has told him is fated: He can either sail home and live a long, pleasant life, or he can fight and die, but achieve deathless glory.
apato
deceptive
complement
derived from Latin "complere," meaning fill up. Taken together makes a whole
elementary
derived from Latin noun elementum, which means first principle.
statue
derived from Latin stare "stand." means from of a person or animal made out of stone or other material
phylogeny
description of the "tribal" or "familial" relations of living things
learners
designed for non-native speakers of English and try to give information on usage for non-native speakers
geologic ages
determined by stratigraphy
greek and roman religions
did not have scriptures; they had myths was more about practices, such as sacrifice, festivals, correct worship, etc
diaphora
differences; differentia
neglig/neglect
disregard
ag/act
do
indefinite pronouns
do not refer to specific people, places or things, but instead refer to non-specific people, entities, etc. ex. any, anybody/anyone, anything
psycho + iatro
doctor + ia
psychiatry
doctor that deals with mental disorders
iatro
doctor, treatment
can
dog
asin
donkey
cata
down
de
down
kata
down, along, throughout, according to
tract
draw, pull
gram
drawing, writing
bibe
drink
fuge
drive away, flee
pharmaco
drug, poison
arid
dry
desiccated
dry out
necrosis, necrotic
dying in the body
ot/oto
ear
ge, gee
earth
humus
earth
phag
eat
phage
eat
vor/vore
eating
mene
ed
ov/ovi
egg
alibi
elsewhere
st sebastian
emperor diocletian prosecuted him and christians since he believed that christianity was a betrayal ordered him to be tied by a snake and shot by arrows
host
enemy
carpe diem
enjoy [seize/harvest] the day
conscript
enroll, enlist
hyphens
entries preceded by a _ are forms that occur at the ends of words—suffixes or combining forms
venus
fria
amicus curiae
friend of the court
rani
frog
ab/abs
from
sarcasm
from Late Latin sarcasmus, from Greek sarkasmos to rend the flesh, from sarx flesh
statute
from Latin "statuere"=set up. means a rule or regulation set up by a legislative body
verse
from Latin "vers"=turn. where one turns to the beginning of the next line
marital
from Latin -marit- meaning married
pour
from Middle English. has both transitive and intransitive forms.
stanza
from Middle Latin "a place where one stops." Group of 4 or more verses
E Pluribus Unum
from out of many, one
ex libris
from the books of; from the library of
ab ovo
from the egg, from the beginning
gel
frost, ice
frugi/fructi
fruit
ose/ous
full of
paradise
garden
liberal
generous
coelacanth
get their name from the hollow caudal (caudal < LaAn cauda, "tail") fin rays.
ingenious
gifted
bases
gives primary meaning to a word
saturnine
gloomy
ba
go
it
go
ced/cede/ceed/cess
go, come
dionysus
god of the grape harvest, associated with ecstasy, outsiders - and a faithful husband to Ariadne
hades/pluto
god of the underworld
ares
god of war for war's sake—violent, brutal war
athena
goddess of defensive, strategic war. goddess of wisdom, law, civilization, just war
deviant
goes away from normal path
eu
good, well
chondro
granule (In medicine, this morpheme usually means "cartilage")
prehens, prehend
grasp
herbi
grass
zeus
great general and politician to reign; in short, he must be a great king (he is the patron god of kings)
achilles
greek champion of acheans; son of peleus and thetis)
o
greek combining vowel
puois
greek for nature
aster/astro
greek star
chloro
green, greenish-yellow
phylac
guard, protect
ji guillotin
guillotine; french physician who proposed the use of a machine that would execute prisoners more humanely
semi
half, partially
sclero
hard
sclero
hardening
sclerosis, sclerotic
hardening of nerves
innocuous
harmless
omnipotent
having all power; able to do anything
ble/ile
having capability or capacity
ine
having the nature of
carcinogenic
having the potential to cause cancer
Annuit Coeptus
he assents to what has been undertaken
ipse dixit
he himself said it, arbitrary command
esse quam videri volunt
he preferred to be good rather than to seem so
salutary
healthful
audi
hear
card/cardio
heart
therm
heat
ferv
heat, glow
tain
hold
bible
holy books
ceros
horn
kerat
horn
hippo
horse
horo
hour, time
oiko
house, inhabit
ei
i, ei
neurosis, neurotic
ill state of nerves
in
in
in absentia
in absence
in camera
in chamber
mitosis
in first stages, chromatin appears as long threads
pro
in front of, before
bona fide
in good faith
id
in the condition of
in extremis
in the extremes; in a difficult situation
in loco parentis
in the place of a parent
anno domini
in the year of the lord
in toto
in total
in, im
in, into
in/im/il/ir
in, into
en/em
in, into (<Greek)
en, em
in, within
-o
indicates that it sometimes occur with a connecting vowel
(G)
indicates that root is of Greek origin
(L)
indicates that root is of Latin origin
itis
inflammation
chondritis
inflammation of cartilage
lunacy
insanity
insecti
insect
{intens}
intensifying morpheme
enter/entero
intestine
viscer
intestines
intro
into, inward
fahrenheit
invented a scale for measuring heat in which 0 degrees was the freezing point of snow and salt equally mixed by weight and 100 degrees was the approximate normal temperature of the human body. the freezing point of water on the scale is 32 degrees, the boiling point is 212 degrees.
celsius
invented a temperature scale in which 0 degrees is the freezing point and 100 degrees is the boiling point
non sequitur
it does not follow
figurative
it does not have its etymological meaning EX. root of a problem
1800
it was apparent that Greek, Latin, and Sanskrit had all developed from a common ancestor, just as the Romance languages had developed from Latin
apatosaurus
it's called deceptive lizard because its fossilized remains were easy to confuse with other lizards
john mcadam
macadam; scots engineer who invented a type of road surface where small stones are bound together with something like tar
ofrendas (altars)
made in honor of the dead
stellated
made to look like a star
gen
make or produce
creat
make, build
ize
makes a verb out of nouns and adjectives
ive
makes adjectives
ive
makes adjectives, which are sometimes used as nouns
-y
makes nouns
ia/ion
makes nouns
sis
makes nouns
al
makes nouns into adjectives
andro
man
anthropo
man
vir
man, male
modus operandi
manner of working
multi
many
poly
many
polyphyly
many-tribe-ness
gam
marriage
samuel maverick
maverick; texan rancher who did not bother to brand his cattle
meter
measure
metro/meter
measure
perimeter
measuring around
carni
meat, flesh
fus
melt, flow
angel
messenger, envoy
modus operandi
method of operating
nickname
mid-15c., misdivision of ekename (c.1300), an eke name, literally "an additional name," from Old English eaca "an increase," related to eacian "to increase" (see eke; also see N ). As a verb from 1530s. Related: Nicknamed ; nicknaming.
media
middle
meso
middle
martial
military, war-loving
ment
mind
psycho
mind
phren
mind, diaphragm
ite
mineral
morpheme
minimum unit of meaning
mirabile dictu
miraculous to say
crater
mixer (mixing bowl for wine)
adverbs
modify verbs, adjectives, and other adverbs
pecuni
money
luna
moon
empty morpheme
morpheme has no clear meaning
suffix
morpheme that comes at the end of the word
full morpheme
morpheme with a meaning that can be assigned to it
my
mouse, muscle
kine, cine
move
metazoa
multicelled animals, usually with differentiated tissues. Originally, metazoa were called "transformed animals" because they represented a major transformation of protozoa (one-celled animals) into multi-celled animals.
vodka
n. 1802, from Russian vodka, literally "little water," from voda "water" (from PIE *wedor, *wodor ; see water (n.1)) + diminutive suffix -ka.
nomin/nomen
name
nomenclature
name calling
onym
name or meaning
7 planets
named after Roman Gods
neuro
nerve
cene
new
ceno
new
jean nicot
nicotine; french ambassador to Portugal, who imported a drug from the New World
extinct
no longer existing
a, av
no, not
rhin/rhino
nose
nasturtium
nose-twister
non
not
unconscious
not being aware, deprived of one's senses
unconscionable
not guided by one's conscience
disinterested
not influenced by selfish motives
uninterested
not interested, indifferent
entomo
notched animal, insect
nota bene
note well; an interesting/useful piece of information
nullus
nothing
noun
noun
syntactical test for nouns
noun marker. preceded by function words: the, a, many, that, these.
kary
nucleus
plant taxonomy
number and arrangement of the reproductive organs; a plant's class was determined by its stamens (male organs), and its order by its pistils (female organs); he calls them andria (male parts) and gynia (female parts)
oi
oe
genitive
of
civilis
of a citizen, civil, civic
cardinal
of foremost importance
sui generis
of its own kind
paternal
of or appropriate to a father
chondral
of or relating to cartilage
compos mentis
of sound mind
lunar
of, determined by, relating to, or resembling the moon
per se
of, in, or by itself (intrinsically)
postlapsarian
of, relating to, or characteristic of the time or state after the fall of humankind described in the Bible
consul
official at a consulate; top Roman officer
oi
oi; "oil"
ger
old
paleo
old
sen
old
senex/senis
old man
epi
on, against
ou
oo; "pool"
apert
open
doxa
opinion
antipodes
opposite feet
sanguine
optimistic
ordinal
order
ordin
order, rank, level
ec, ex
out
ex
out
ex/e/ef
out
e, ex
out, from
exo
outside
bishop
overseer, episcopal
au
ow; "cow"
pall
pale
via
path, road, journey
dramatis personae
people of the drama
per capita
per head, per person
per annum
per year
or
person or thing who acts or does something
logist
person who studies
homer
refers to the author(s) who first wrote down the versions that became the Iliad and the Odyssey
ambrose burnside
sideburns; general for the union in the war between the states
father
pitar (sanskrit), pater (Latin, Greek)
loc
place
top
place
euphonious
pleasing to the ear
pontiff
pope
oedipus complex
postulated that a male child's mother is the original focus of his erotic desire
fus
pour, gush
kratos
power
imperium/imperii
power, command, empire (imperial, empire)
Greek pattern
prefix + base + suffix
ec
prefix meaning out
conservation
preservation of such things as our natural resources
protero
prior, earlier; literally means firster, that is, first of two
carcer
prison
-sis
process
nounce
proclaim
poie
produce or make
strauss
produced pants of heavy denim, reinforced with copper rivets
res publica
public matter
puls/pulse/pel
push
press
push down
pel, pulse
push, drive
invest
put (something) into
pose/pone/posit
put, place
pyrrhus
pyrrhic; King of Epirus in Greece. He invaded Italy and fought two successful battles against the Romans but suffered heavy losses
ence/ity/y/tude
quality, state, condition
agnosticism
questions whether or not a God exists
south carolina
quis serabit? (Who shall separate us?)
ethno
race or nation of people
rara avis
rare bird, unique
pore
read, study intensely
iliad
recounts a section of the Trojan war (it does not include the death of Achilles, nor the fall of Troy)
odyssey
recounts the homecoming (nostos) of Odysseus after the Trojan War
erythro
red
allusion
reference to something or someone in an indirect or casual way
compliment
refers to all the little things that one does to be polite or flattering
para, par
side by side, abnormal, subordinate
anthropocentric
regarding humankind as the central or most important element of existence, especially as opposed to God or animals
metempsychosis
reincarnation
venereal
relating to sexual intercourse
stellar
relating to the stars
paenitere
repent
spartans
rigorously self-disciplined; austere,frugal
emulation
rivalry, particularly involving imitation
lethe
river of forgetfulness
styx
river of the underworld
sisyphus
roll ball uphill, then it goes down seems to have no purpose
venus
roman aphrodite
mars
roman ares
diana
roman artemis
minerva
roman athena
bacchus/liber
roman dionysus
pluto
roman hades
vulcan
roman hephaestus
juno
roman hera
mercury
roman hermes
vesta
roman hestia
X
roman numeral 10
C
roman numeral 100
M
roman numeral 1000
IV
roman numeral 4
XL
roman numeral 40
V
roman numeral 5
L
roman numeral 50
D
roman numeral 500
VI
roman numeral 6
VII
roman numeral 7
VIII
roman numeral 8
IX
roman numeral 9
neptune
roman poseidon
jupiter
roman zeus
rhizo
root
=
root sometimes occurs in the form at the end of the word or as word on its own
sapro
rotten
eras
rub out
archy
rule
cracy
rule
plutocracy
rule by the wealthy
correct
rule, guide
agamemnon
ruler of acheans; commander of the greek forces
naviga
sail a boat
naut
sailor
halo
salt in Greek
coeval
same age or date of origin
taxonomy
science of classification
reprehensive
scolding
gono
seed, sexual generation
petit
seek, desire
sui
self
senatus
senate
mit/miss
send, let go
semicolons
separate dissimilar meanings
commas
separate similar meanings
tortured
severe pain, distorted
acid
sharp
oxy
sharp," "sour," "acid"; oxygen was originally thought to be what makes acids
whisky
short for whiskybae, etc. 1715, from Gaelic uisge beatha "whisky," literally "water of life," from Old Irish uisce "water" (from PIE *ud-skio-, from root *wed- (1) "water, wet;" see water (n.1)) + bethu "life" (from PIE *gwi-wo-tut-, suffixed form of *gwi-wo-, from root *gweie- (1) "to live;" see bio-).
abridged
shorter, less complicated dictionaries
morb
sick
grati/grate
thanks
cambria
the Latin name for Wales, because that is where he found rocks that attested to an earlier age of the earth
polaris
the North Star called around which the stars appear to turn
precambrian
the ONLY supereon
transliteration
the act of rewriting words in different writing systems
volition
the act of using one's own will
anthropomorphism
the attribution of human characteristics or behavior to a god, animal, or object
borrowings
the base comes from another language
conservatism
the belief that it is best not to make changes
violation
the breaking of a law, not necessarily with violence
meiosis
the chromosomes are lessened in number
hephaestus
the craftsman/smith god. He was born lame and ugly. His own mother, Hera, in disgust threw him from Olympus.
superego
the critical and moralizing role
PIE
the earliest people who spoke Indo-European AKA Indo-Germans / Aryans
connotation
the emotional concepts that the word has for its users
phanerozoic
the eon of evident life
religion
the etymology is not clear ancient source connected it with re-reading (legible) christian source connected it with lig (tie or bind)
tertiary period
the first part of the Cenozoic Era
edenic
the garden where according to the account in Genesis Adam and Eve first lived; paradise
pompadour
the glamorous mistress of the french king louis XV, known for her elaborate hair styles
apogee
the highest or most distant point; climax
nahuatl
the language of the people of Tenochtitlan
luna
the moon
lunacy, lunatic
the moon was traditionally thought to cause insanity
base
the morpheme to which a prefix is added
helen
the most beautiful of all women
phanerozoic eon
the only one eon after the Precambrian
anthropogenesis
the origin and development of humans
demos
the people
mesozoic
the period of middle life. used to be called "secondary period"
cenozoic
the period of new life
paleozoic
the period of old life
denotation
the plain, direct meaning of a word as it is used by speakers of a language
perigee
the point in the orbit of a heavenly body, especially the moon, or of an artificial satellite at which it is nearest to the earth
ego
the sense of self that a person has
id
the source of raw erotic desire in a human etymologically, it means "it" in Latin
hypercorrection
the use of an inappropriate pronunciation, grammatical form, or construction, as between you and I, resulting usually from an effort to replace incorrect or seemingly incorrect forms with correct ones
quantifier pronouns
these pronouns designate quantity and stand in for their nouns. ex. more, many, a few, one, two, three
interrogative pronouns
these question words stand in for a noun in the answer they seek
on
thing
ov
thing
martyreo
to bear witness, to provide evidence
culpare
to blame
ly
to break
spirare
to breathe
humare
to bury
abduct
to carry off, kidnap
adapt
to change to meet a new situation
innoculate
to create immunity by injecting a disease agent into an animal or plant
methys
to drunken
orpheus
to find eurydice
terrere
to frighten
ducere, ductus
to lead
amare
to love
fic
to make
stellate
to make look like a star/arrange into a star
annul
to make void
the
to put
krateo
to rule
cla/cal
to shout, call
stare
to stand
raze
to tear something down
ad nauseam
to the point of making one ill
torquere, tort
to twist
to work like a trojan
to work very hard
ad, as
to, toward
con
together
con, com
together
con/com/co/col
together with
con
together, with, {intens}
hypo
too little
odont
tooth
ooovt
tooth
ad hominem
towards the person, directed at a person
ad rem
towards the thing, directed at the matter at hand
American Dialect Society
tracks neologisms, word of the year
meta
transformed, more highly developed
christ
transliterated Messiah (savior). it means "annointed one" and refers to the ancient hebrew practice of annointing kings and others for divinely sanctioned duties
Hermes Psychopompos (Mercury)
transporter of souls
heracles/hercules
travelling to the underworld subdue Cerberus as part of his Twelve Labors for King Eurystheus
phyl, phylo
tribe or race
hermes
trickster, thief, merchant, translator (the only god who goes to the realm of dead)
pesti
troublesome animal
confid
trust
trop
turn
tropos
turn
deflection
turning aside
tropikos
turning circle that is, circle where turning occurs
bis
twice
semiweekly
twice a week
tortuous
twisted
oi-
two
diphthongs
two vowels that blend into one sound
binomial designation
two-name designation
menelaus
tyndareus chooses him to wed helen; later becomes king of sparta; brother of agamemnon
tyrannos
tyrant
ou
u
-ov
um
desert noun
uncultivated place, with few or no inhabitants
hypo
under
sub/suf/sup
under
feder
union of states
catholic
universal, all-encompassing
ana
up, back, again
epi, ep
upon
acropolis
upper city
cyst/cysto
urinary bladder
-os
us
comma rule
use a comma when a coordinating conjunction joins two clauses and introduces a new grammatical subject
sume
use up, take
interjections
words that are "thrown between" other words. the little words and expressions that we throw into our language to express emotions and attitudes
cognates
words that have a common ancestor
conjunctions
words that join together
pronouns
words that stand in the place of nouns. act like nouns, but, typically they cannot have "noun markers." act as substitutions or placeholders.
labor
work
vermi
worm
script, scribe
write
graph
write, draw, map
scripture
writing
stationery
writing materials like paper and envelopes
binomina
written so that they stand out from their surroundings—usually in Italics—but not necessarily. They just have to stand out
binomina
written so that they stand out from their surroundings—usually in Italics—but not necessarily. They just have to stand out. The genus is capitalized and the species name is not.
suppression
you pushing memories under
except
you take it out of the rest
accept
you take it to yourself
juven
young
infant
young child
artemis
young daughter, goddess of the hunt, wilderness, the moon, virginity, childbirth - Apollo's twin
apollo
young man at prime of beauty - god of the sun, healing and prophecy, music and poetry
solon's lesson
your prosperity is not your own
hera
zeus's sister and wife who is batshit crazy when it comes to getting angry at mortal women
self
αὐτός (pronoun)
life
βίος (noun)
earth
γῆ
write
γράφω (verb)
greek cardinal 10
δέκα
greek ordinal 2nd
δεύτερος (deutero)
greek cardinal 2
δύο
greek cardinal 9
ἐννέα
greek cardinal 100
ἑκατόν (hecto)
greek cardinal 7
ἑπτά
single, only
μόνος
greek cardinal 8
ὀκτώ
few
ὀλίγος
all
πᾶν
greek cardinal 5
πέντε
much, many
πολύ
greek ordinal 1st
πρῶτος (proto)
greek cardinal 4
τέτρας
greek cardinal 3
τρεῖς, τρία
greek cardinal 1000
χίλιοι (kilo)
time
χρόνος (noun)
greek cardinal 1
ἕν
iliad
• Does not cover the entire Trojan war. • Does not include the Fall of Troy, nor the Trojan horse, nor the death of Achilles. • Deals with about 55 days after nine years war. • Focuses on Achilles' rage