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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 21, 20251 min read
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 20, 20251 min read
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 19, 20251 min read
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 18, 20251 min read
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 17, 20251 min read
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 16, 20251 min read
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 14, 20251 min read
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 13, 20251 min read
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 12, 20251 min read
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 11, 20251 min read
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 10, 20251 min read
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 9, 20251 min read
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 7, 20251 min read
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 6, 20251 min read
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 5, 20251 min read
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 4, 20251 min read
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 3, 20251 min read
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 2, 20251 min read
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 31, 20251 min read
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 30, 20251 min read
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