anthropo in English

prefix
1
human; of a human being.
anthropometry

Use "anthropo" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "anthropo" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "anthropo", or refer to the context using the word "anthropo" in the English Dictionary.

1. Andro-: ( an'drō ), Distinguish this combining form from anthropo-

2. Fasciolosis is an anthropo zoonotic disease caused by the Trematoda Fasciola hepatica.

3. Anthropogeny Meaning: "origination of the human race," 1833, from anthropo- + -geny

4. Anthropogenic (an″thrŏ-pŏ-jen′ik) [ anthropo- + -genic] Caused or produced by human beings or by human economic and social activities

5. The word Anthropometry“ ” is derived from the Greek word “anthropo” meaning human“ ” and the Greek word “metron” meaning me“ asure.” The field of

6. The word Anthropocene is derived from the Greek words anthropo, for “man,” and cene for “new,” coined and made popular by biologist Eugene Stormer and chemist Paul Crutzen in 2000.

7. An Anthropomorphic God? The combination of “anthropo” meaning “human” and “morphous” meaning to “have a form” suggests that God is not Spirit but has a body, which is untrue

8. Anthropo-+‎ -genesis, attested in English 1862, replacing or used alongside earlier Anthropogeny; earlier use in German Anthropogenesis and French anthropogénésie (alongside anthropogénie), from the 1820s

9. Anthropophagous (adj.) "cannibalistic, man-eating," 1807, from Greek anthrōpophagos "man-eating," from anthrōpos "man, human" (see anthropo-) + phagos "eating" (from PIE root *bhag- "to share out, apportion; to get a share")

10. Anthropomorphous (adj.) "having human form; anthropoid in form" (of apes, etc.), 1753, Englishing of Late Latin anthropomorphus "having human form," from Greek anthropomorphos "of human form," from anthrōpos "human being" (see anthropo-) + morphē "form," a word of uncertain etymology

11. Anthropoid (adj.) "manlike," especially, in zoology, "human or simian, of humans and monkeys" (as opposed to lemurs and other less-human-like primates), 1835, from Greek anthropoeides "like a man, resembling a man; in human form;" see anthropo-+ -oid.As a noun, from 1832 (the Greek noun in this sense was anthroparion).Related: Anthropoidal.