FURC-ate; TRI-FURC-ate, to divide into three branches or forks; furca (pl. furcae, an ingrowth of the thorax of many insects; FURC-ula, the wishbone of a bird. |
scientia : knowledge, science, skill. scilicet : evidently, certainly, of course, no doubt, assuredly. scindo : to cut, rend, split, divide, separate. scio ... |
LATIN AND GREEK ROOTS OF SCIENTIFIC TERMS a, without (beginning of many words) ab, from abduct, lead or draw from acanth, prickle or spine acer, without ... |
Common Animals animal zoo-, -zoon bird ornis avi-, -avis cat feli-, -felis dog cyno, cyon cani-, -canis fish ichthyo-, -ichthys. |
(Latin) two, double di-, dia-. (Greek) through, across, apart du-, duo- two ... Scientific Root Words, Prefixes, And Suffixes. -ist person who deals with. |
7 июн. 2022 г. · Latin Phrases in Scientific Writing · i.e.. id est, 'in other words, that is' · e.g.. exempli gratia, 'for example' · viz. videlicet, 'namely'. |
27 янв. 1999 г. · Latin raises its ancient hand in scientific English. Here are some of the more commonly used Latin words. circa (ca.) et alia (et al.) |
Words such as larva, sensillum, and elytron appear to be Latin or Greek. Many of them were invented by scientists and were never part of classical Latin or ... |
21 авг. 2024 г. · Latin roots form the backbone of scientific terminology, providing a universal language for scholars across disciplines. Origins of scientific Latin · Common Latin suffixes |
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