| etymology | (et-a-MALL-o-gee) history of words | en |
| etymology | the study of the sources and development of words a history of a word | en |
| etymology | the study of the sources and development of words | en |
| etymology | The origin and history of a word | en |
| etymology | The etymology of a particular word is its history | en |
| etymology | The facts relating to the formation or derivation of a word | en |
| etymology | a history of a word | en |
| etymology | That part of grammar which relates to the changes in the form of the words in a language; inflection | en |
| etymology | The study of the historical development of languages, particularly as manifested in individual words | en |
| etymology | An account of the origin and historical development of a word | en |
| etymology | That branch of philological science which treats of the history of words, tracing out their origin, primitive significance, and changes of form and meaning | en |
| etymology | Etymology is derived from the Greek word e/)tymon(etymon) meaning "a sense" and logo/j(logos) meaning "word " Etymology is the study of the original meaning and development of a word tracing its meaning back as far as possible | en |
| etymology | The origin of a word | en |
| etymology | an account of the origin and history of a word | en |
| etymology | Etymology is the study of the origins and historical development of words | en |
| etymology | study of the origin of words, study of the historical development of words isim | en |
| etymology | Study of the history of a word; where the name came from | en |
| etymology | The history and origin of a word and its shifts in meaning over time The word "etymology" comes from the Greek eteos, true, plus logos, word or idea This is its etymology | en |
| etymology | Study of the origin and historical development of words | en |
| etymology | "E-tailer" is quite interesting, as the "e-" prefix (for "electronic", as in "e-mail") replaces an element of the word "retailer" rather than simply being tacked on to the start of the word (as in "e-mail", "e-commerce", and so on) My etymology reads: [ e- (in ELECTRONIC a , after E-MAIL n ) + -tailer (in RETAILER n ) ] | en |
| etymology | The study of word origins | en |
| etymology | Atheist originated in two Greek roots: "A" which means "without" or "not" | en |
| etymologies | plural of etymology | en |