etymological in Vietnamese

@etymological /,etimə'lɔdʤik/ (etymological) /,etimə'lɔdʤikəl/
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Sentence patterns related to "etymological"

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

1. The intersection contains three aspects:"heterological etymology ", "etymological use in common" and "etymological borrowed words".

2. Basque: ·dinner··↑ 1.0 1.1 “Afari” in Etymological Dictionary of Basque by R

3. Corrie is a unisex surname in the English language.The name has several different etymological origins

4. The word “Adjoining,” in its etymological sense, means touching or contiguous, as distinguished from lying near to or adjacent

5. The name caviar comes from the terms ‘Caviare’ and ‘Caviarie’ that have their etymological origin from a Turkish word ‘Havyar’

6. Austere is the most individual word in the list; it still suggests the etymological sense of dryness and hardness of nature.

7. An Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language: To which is Prefixed, a by John Jamieson (1879) "To Beflum, ».a.

8. Engaging, illuminating, and authoritative, Ralph Keyes's The Hidden History of Coined Words explores the etymological underworld of terms and expressions and uncovers plenty of hidden gems.

9. A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the Hebrew Language for Readers of English adds: “The orig[inal] meaning [of the verb ʽudh] prob[ably] was ‘he said repeatedly and forcefully.’”

10. Why 'hoop'? Nathan Bailey, Dictionarium Britannicum: Or a More Compleat Universal Etymological English Dictionary has this entry for cock-a-hoop: COCK a hoop [coque-a-hupe, F[rench].i

11. The word was formed by a rather Circuitous route, according to the OED's etymological information. But the path of electricity from a power plant to your wall socket is a rather, well, Circuitous one

12. Follow the etymological path of Acolyte back far enough and you'll arrive at keleuthos, a Greek noun that means "path" and that is itself the parent of akolouthos, an adjective that means "following."

13. Waurkeis 'do', sokeip 'seek', (3 sg.) namneip 'take', taikneis 'express' where the -ji- Alternant is expected in verbs containing etymological ly light syllable in the root, whereas the -ei- variant -- in verbs containing a heavy syllable (or two light ones).

14. Apostasy (apo, from, and stasis, station, standing, or position).The word itself in its etymological sense, signifies the desertion of a post, the giving up of a state of life; he who voluntarily embraces a definite state of life cannot leave it, therefore, without becoming an Apostate.

15. In the case of Alienist, the etymological trail leads from Latin to French, where the adjective aliene ("insane") gave rise to the noun Alieniste, referring to a doctor who treats the insane. Alienist first appeared in print in English in the 19th century.

16. If "Adulation" makes you think of a dog panting after its master, you're on the right etymological track; the word ultimately derives from the Latin verb adulari, meaning "to fawn on" (a sense used specifically of the affectionate behavior of dogs) or "to flatter."

17. Cacography is deliberate comic misspelling, a type of humour similar to malapropism. The term in the sense of "poor spelling, accentuation, and punctuation" is a semantic antonym to orthography, and in the sense of "poor handwriting" it is an etymological antonym to the word calligraphy: Cacography is from Greek κακός + γραφή.

18. Anomie is a classic concept of Sociology since Émile Durkheim mobilised it in De la Division du Travail Social (The Division of Labour in Society) (1893), and in Le Suicide (Suicide) (1897).1 However, and although in etymological terms, the word Anomie “means the absence of norms, rules or laws”, 2,3 Anomie is a polysemic

19. ‘The Byname Martel is attested from the 9th century.’ ‘The Resurrection Man - to use a Byname of the period - was not to be deterred by any of the sanctities of customary piety.’ ‘The table below contains all of the 116 distinct Bynames found in the poll tax data, together with etymological notes on as many of them as I can identify.’

20. ‘The Byname Martel is attested from the 9th century.’ ‘The Resurrection Man - to use a Byname of the period - was not to be deterred by any of the sanctities of customary piety.’ ‘The table below contains all of the 116 distinct Bynames found in the poll tax data, together with etymological notes on as many of them as I can identify.’

21. Altruism (n.) 1853, "unselfishness, devotion to the welfare of others, opposite of egoism," from French Altruisme, coined or popularized 1830 by French philosopher Auguste Comte, with -ism + autrui (Old French altrui) "of or to others," from Latin alteri, dative of alter "other" (see alter).The -l-is perhaps an etymological reinsertion from the Latin word.