of Latin Iustinus (see Justin). -ine (1) also -in, adjectival word-forming element, Middle English, from Old French -in/-ine, or directly from Latin suffix -inus/-ina/-inum "of, like," forming adjectives and derived nouns, as in divinus, feminus, caninus; from PIE adjectival ...
Twitter Google Share on Facebook etymologically Thesaurus Encyclopedia Wikipedia et·y·mo·log·i·cal (ĕt′ə-mə-lŏj′ĭ-kəl)alsoet·y·mo·log·ic(-lŏj′ĭk) adj. Of or relating to etymology or based on the principles of etymology. ...
Using the terminology of genealogy in this book is explained by the fact that the etymology of the word echoes the generation of knowledge. In this sense, the aim is to map the 'DNA' of both dehumanization and peace-less reconciliation through a historical process tracing of those prac- ti...
Etymology Adjective, Noun, and Adverb Middle English, from Old English gōd; akin to Old High German guot good, Middle High German gatern to unite, Sanskrit gadhya what one clings to First Known Use Adjective before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a(1) Noun before th...
Wilkinson reminds us that the etymology of ‘dichotomy’ is a cutting in two and his extension of ‘borrowed’ to a deeper ‘sense of lineage, persistence and repetition, primarily of [sexual] loss’ is well justified. There may be an additional allusion to the equipoise of borrowed light ...
We all as students with the core ethos of loving truth are ourselves processes embedded in dialectics, or unity of opposites that describes knowledge space, from the infinitesimal to infinity. As the etymology of "research" says, humanity is wandering in search of itself.Journal of Systemics, ...
The etymology of the word ‘nod’ comes from the word ‘nud’ meaning to wander or to move to and fro. Nod/Nud The general consensus of biblical scholars is that Nod was not a place such as a settlement before Cain’s arrival; but a place for wandering fugitives, a wilderness, ...
Such discursive inversions of the moving ego path assume that the “normal” attitude would be to look forward. Paraphrasing Lakoff and Johnson (1980), this occasional feature could even actualize a more general orientational metaphor, underlying the etymology of the word progress (forwards is good...
It all began when I was cutting an Orange for my niece when she asked me why the name Orange is both a color and a fruit. After doing some research, I discovered that the root of the word Orange in the English language is derived from the fruit. In other words the Etymology of the...
the Messiah is our redeemer. The etymology of the name Yeshua (ישוע) shows that it is a contraction on the name Yehoshua (יהושוע). The meaning of the name Yeshua (ישוע) is provided for us explicitly within the text inMatthew 1:21, the NA...