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Root of the Week: LOG (Friday)
Prologue, Monologue, Dialogu e (Noun) Dramas of all kinds, whether on stage or on the screen, involve words (even silent films had...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 211 min read
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Root of the Week: LOG (Thursday)
Philology, Etymology, Lexicology (Noun) There are several -ologies that relate to language and writing. Philology (from the Greek phil...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 201 min read
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Root of the Week: LOG (Wednesday)
Mythology, Theology. Astrology, Numerology, Demonology (Noun) The Greek word mythos means ”speech, “story,” or “saga.” The word...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 191 min read
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Root of the Week: LOG (Tuesday)
Geology, Biology, Epidemiology, Psychology, Pathology (Noun) The suffix -ology denotes a field of knowledge or study. The Greek root...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 181 min read
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Root of the Week: LOG (Monday)
Logic (Noun) Logic is both a familiar mode of thought and also a formal branch of philosophy (practiced by logicians .). In a general...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 171 min read
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Root of the Week: LOG
The Greek root log, meaning “word,” “discourse,” or “reason.” appears in many English words having to do with language, science,...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 161 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH (Friday)
Photography, Choreography, Cinematography (Noun) In a figurative sense, people can “write” using media other than words. The Greek word...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 141 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH (Thursday)
Geography, Cartography, Topography (Noun) The root “geo” means “earth,” so geography means “writing about the earth,” or the science of...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 131 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH (Wednesday)
Grapheme, Calligraphy (Noun) The word grapheme combines graph with the suffix “eme, which means “unit of language.” A grapheme is a...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 121 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH (Tuesday)
Biography (Noun) A biography is the story of person’s “bio,” or life. Biographers sometimes present their subjects in a flattering...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 111 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH (Monday)
Autograph (Noun) “Auto” means “self” and graph means “writing,” so an autograph is a signature made by oneself, a person’s own...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 101 min read
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Root of the Week: GRAPH
GRAPH, Greek Many English words contain the Greek root graph, meaning “to write.” It appears specifically in words that have to do with...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 91 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO (Friday)
Symbiosis (Noun) The Greek root “sym” or “syn” means “with” or “together.” Symbiosis is a phenomenon in which two different kinds of...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 71 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO (Thursday)
Amphibian (Noun) The Greek root “amphi” means “of both kinds.” When it is a prefix for “bio” (ending the word with “an” makes it a...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 61 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO (Wednesday)
Biohack (Verb) Biohacking (Noun) The word “hack” is used colloquially to describe gaining unauthorized access to a computer. In the...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 51 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO (Tuesday)
Biology (Noun) The word biology combines the root “bio” with the Greek-derived suffix “log,” meaning “the study of.” Biology is a...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 41 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO (Monday)
Biography, Biographer, Autobiography (Noun) The word biography is formed by connecting the Greek root “bio” with another Greek root,...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 31 min read
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Root of the Week: BIO
BIO, Greek The Greek root word BIO means “life,” both in the sense of living things and in the sense of the span of a person’s life. BIO...
Charlotte O'Connell
Feb 21 min read
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Root of the Week: CHRON (Friday)
FRIDAY Anachronism (noun) The prefix “ana” means “against,” so something is called an anachronism if it is “against time,” violating the...
Charlotte O'Connell
Jan 311 min read
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Root of the Week: CHRON (Thursday)
THURSDAY Diachronic, Synchronic (adjective) The prefix “syn” means “with” or at the same time” and “dia” means “throughout,” or over...
Charlotte O'Connell
Jan 301 min read
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