etymologically in English

adjective

from an etymological standpoint, with regard to etymology

Use "etymologically" in a sentence

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

1. Enm Benethe Etymologically related

2. Anathemata is etymologically linked with anathema

3. Etymologically, Belfries have nothing to do with bells

4. There's nothing etymologically wrong with either apodictic or Apodeictic

5. Not etymologically related to Ability, though popularly connected with it.

6. Etymologically, the word Biretta is Italian in origin and would more correctly be written beretta (cf

7. [16] To Concoct an excuse is the same, etymologically, as to ‘cook’ one up

8. Etymologically, the word Cent derives from the Latin word "Centum" meaning hundred

9. Etymologically, the word Biretta is Italian in origin and would more correctly be written beretta (cf

10. Etymologically, Alpha came from aleph (the first letter of the Hebrew Alphabet), meaning "ox" in Phoenician.

11. So, Correlative conjunctions, there we see it, definitionally or, etymologically, are related together in some way

12. Etymologically, the word Biretta is Italian in origin and would more correctly be written beretta (cf

13. The poor woman was set on fire and her child ripped from her womb (Asklepios etymologically meaning to be cut out).

14. Etymologically, the derivation of Apocrypha is very simple, being from the Greek apokryphos, hidden, and corresponding to the neuter plural of the adjective

15. If Astrology is etymologically the study of the stars, horoscope comes more precisely from the Greek with horo: time, duration and scope: observation

16. Aporia (also known as diaporesis, etymologically derives from the Greek word “aporos”), is a figure which denotes a pathless path or an impassable passage, suggesting difficulty and perplexity

17. Both pronunciations were in play for a while, and adding to the confusion was the mistaken idea that “coronel” was etymologically related to “crown”—a Colonel …

18. Although "Caballa" is etymologically the feminine form of "caballo", its meaning is not related to the female horse, which is called yegua (from Latin equa)

19. Etymologically speaking, a fairy is something quite particular, related in kind to the naiads, or water nymphs, and while of the genus, we are sui generis.

20. The term Bacillary dysentery etymologically might seem to refer to any dysentery caused by any bacilliform bacteria, but its meaning is restricted by convention to Shigella dysentery.

21. Bequeath - Etymologically, what you Bequeath is what you "say" you will leave someone in your will—but the original sense "say, utter" died out, leaving the …

22. A "Companionable" person is someone who (etymologically at least) is willing to share bread with you. "Companionable" is the adjective form of "companion," which ultimately derives from a combination …

23. Some translate ælf as elf, while others argue it is, in fact, connected etymologically to “Aelfe” via the proto-Indo-European root “Albho-“ which means pale, white, or high (perhaps both).

24. Etymologically speaking, "baksheesh" is from Persian "bakhshīsh," which is also the source of the word Buckshee, meaning "something extra obtained free," "extra rations," or "windfall, gratuity." …

25. The name Anabaptists, etymologically applicable, and sometimes applied to Christian denominations that practise re-baptism is, in general historical usage, restricted to those who, denying the validity of infant baptism, became prominent during the great reform movement of the sixteenth century.

26. Berate and rate can both mean "to scold angrily or violently." This sense of rate was first recorded in the 14th century, roughly two centuries before the now more familiar (and etymologically unrelated) rate meaning "to estimate the value of."

27. Aluminum is the American and Canadian spelling for the silver-white metallic element (number 13 on the periodic table) abundant in the earth’s crust.Aluminium is the preferred spelling outside North America.Neither term is superior to the other, and both are etymologically and logically justifiable

28. Blasphemy (Greek blaptein, "to injure", and pheme, "reputation") signifies etymologically gross irreverence towards any person or thing worthy of exalted esteem. In this broad sense the term is used by Bacon when in his "Advancement of Learning" he speaks of "Blasphemy against learning".

29. Asyndeton (etymologically from the Greek word ‘asindeton’ literally “unconnected”), is a figure of speech Opens in new window which consists when one or more conjunctions are omitted between series of related clauses, either to express vehemence or speed; or sometimes it may be from a noble negligence of nice accuracy, arising from an engrossment

30. Bailie Name Meaning Scottish: status name for one of the senior members of a city council, or (earlier) the chief magistrate in a barony, Older Scots baili. Etymologically, this is the same word as Bailey, but the functions as well as the spelling of the two officials were different in England and Scotland.

31. Etymologically speaking, "Baksheesh" is from Persian "bakhshīsh," which is also the source of the word buckshee, meaning "something extra obtained free," "extra rations," or "windfall, gratuity." "Buckshee" is strictly a British English term and is not used in American English

32. Etymologically, the word Civilization relates to the Latin term civitas, or ' city ', which is why it sometimes refers to urban state-level societies, setting aside the nomadic people who lack a permanent settlement and those who live in settlements that are not considered urban or do not have a state-level organization.

33. However I could easily see a double meaning of the Age of Pisces (represented by Jesus himself as the Piscean fish) being the current period, transferring to the Age of Aquarius (as the full ocean) of total abundance (etymologically abundance in Latin as Abundantem means overflow, much like the ocean overflows the earth)

34. The word Breviary, etymologically a compendium or abridgment, is applied to the liturgical work which contains the psalms and the hymns, the readings from Sacred Scripture and from the writings of the Fathers, the prayers and the responses, which are combined to form the canonical hours of the divine office of prayer recited daily throughout

35. Etymologically, the name Allah is probably a contraction of the Arabic al-Ilāh, “the God.”The name’s origin can be traced to the earliest Semitic writings in which the word for god was il, el, or eloah, the latter two used in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament).Allah is the standard Arabic word for God and is used by Arabic