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Language, 1905
French fléchir < Old French fleschir < fleschier, “to bend,” < *flexicare < flexus < flectere, “to bend.”French fléchir, O. F. fleschir, fleskir has been derived by Förster, Zeitschrift f. rom. Phil., III, p. 262, from a Latin *fleskire < *fiescus < flexus. The assumption of the shift of ks to sk is defended by an appeal to alaskir
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French fléchir < Old French fleschir < fleschier, “to bend,” < *flexicare < flexus < flectere, “to bend.”French fléchir, O. F. fleschir, fleskir has been derived by Förster, Zeitschrift f. rom. Phil., III, p. 262, from a Latin *fleskire < *fiescus < flexus. The assumption of the shift of ks to sk is defended by an appeal to alaskir
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The Classical Quarterly, 1924
The generally accepted explanation of the -πλος (−πλóος) in these words, that it comes from the root pel- ‘to fold’ (Boisacq, Diet. Etym. s.v. διπλóος), fails to account for the presence of the double ο in -πλóος. May not this -πλóος be identical with πλος [πλó(F)ος] [voyage]?
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The generally accepted explanation of the -πλος (−πλóος) in these words, that it comes from the root pel- ‘to fold’ (Boisacq, Diet. Etym. s.v. διπλóος), fails to account for the presence of the double ο in -πλóος. May not this -πλóος be identical with πλος [πλó(F)ος] [voyage]?
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Etymology and Etymologies in the Lexicon
2019This chapter considers the etymological material that remains in the Lexicon and why it is there. It suggests that because pronouns, prepositions, temporal adverbs like ‘now’ and ‘yesterday’, and basic verbs like ‘want’ and ‘come’ are part of everyday vocabulary, they are likely to be inherited.
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Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society, 1997
Ancient ‘etymology’ is now such a well-established modern scholarly interest that a paper about it need no longer be prefaced by an account of its commonest forms or by a justification of its importance, especially in poetry – and that despite the pseudo-etymological nature of many ancient etymologies. For such matters it is sufficient to refer to what
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Ancient ‘etymology’ is now such a well-established modern scholarly interest that a paper about it need no longer be prefaced by an account of its commonest forms or by a justification of its importance, especially in poetry – and that despite the pseudo-etymological nature of many ancient etymologies. For such matters it is sufficient to refer to what
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1991
To the Editor. —Corneal endothelial cell size, shape, and density are important parameters of endothelial function. Rao and colleagues 1 first used the term polymegethism to describe size variation in the endothelial monolayer. Endothelial polymegethism may be seen in several conditions, including aging, contact lens wear, anterior uveitis, glaucoma ...
Walter J. Stark+3 more
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To the Editor. —Corneal endothelial cell size, shape, and density are important parameters of endothelial function. Rao and colleagues 1 first used the term polymegethism to describe size variation in the endothelial monolayer. Endothelial polymegethism may be seen in several conditions, including aging, contact lens wear, anterior uveitis, glaucoma ...
Walter J. Stark+3 more
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Representing Etymology in the LiLa Knowledge Base of Linguistic Resources for Latin
GLOBALEX, 2020Francesco Mambrini, M. Passarotti
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From etymology to pragmatics: Metaphorical and cultural aspects of semantic structure
, 1996P. A. Brandt
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Why do they call chickenpox chickenpox?
Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health, 2021D Ashley R Watson
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Recent Approaches for Downplaying Antibiotic Resistance: Molecular Mechanisms
BioMed Research International, 2023Sarfraz Ahmed+2 more
exaly