Latin and Greek Roots of English Vocabulary: An Online Manual: Lesson 32 [mit(t)-mis(s)-]

June 27, 2010

Root

  

Original Meaning/

Usage Notes

English Derivatives

  

Vocabulary

  

(base) 

mit(t)-/mis(s)- [from Latin]

 

(verb)

to send

 

  

to admit [literally, ‘to send toward;’ to allow someone entrance to a place or group.]

emission [literally, ‘sending out;’ the discharge of a substance.]

mission [literally, ‘a sending;’ an assignment, such as a combat operation, given to a person or group of persons.]

missive

to submit

to transmit [literally, ‘to send across;’ to have something conveyed from one place to another.]

  

missive (noun) [literally, ‘something sent;’ a letter.]

to submit (verb) [literally, ‘to send up from under;’ to surrender to the power of someone else; to present for consideration by another.]

Latin and Greek Roots of English Vocabulary: An Online Manual: Lesson 31 [super-/sur-/hyper-]

June 20, 2010

Root

 

Original Meaning/

Usage Notes

English Derivatives

 

Vocabulary

 

(prefix)

super- [sur-] [from Latin]

 

(preposition)

over

 

 

insuperable

superannuated [literally, ‘over-yeared;’ useless because of excessive old-age; obsolete.]

superfluous [literally, ‘overflowing;’ more than is needed or proper.]

supernatural [literally, ‘over the natural;’ pertaining to what is beyond the natural; divine; miraculous; hyperphysical.]

surreal

to supervise [literally, ‘to oversee;’ to be in charge; to superintend; to direct.]

 

insuperable (adjective) [literally, ‘unovercomable;’ impossible to overcome.]

surreal (adjective) [literally, ‘over the real;’ dreamlike or super-real.]

 

(prefix)

hyper- [from Greek]

 

(preposition)

over

 

 

hyperactive [literally, ‘overactive;’ excessively active.]

hyperbola [literally, ‘overthrowing;’ the locus (graph) of a point which moves in a plane in such a way that the difference of its distances from two fixed points is a constant.]

hyperbole

hyperopia [literally, ‘over-seeing;’ farsightedness.]

hypertension [literally, ‘over-stretching;’ unusually high blood pressure.]

hypertrophic

 

hyperbole (noun) [literally, ‘overthrowing;’ a figure of speech in which exaggeration is used for rhetorical effect.]

hypertrophic (adjective) [literally, ‘over-nourished;’ pertaining to the abnormal enlargement of an organ or tissue.]

Latin and Greek Roots of English Vocabulary: An Online Manual: Lesson 30 [duc-/duct-/agog(ue)-]

June 13, 2010

Root

  

Original Meaning/

Usage Notes

English Derivatives

  

Vocabulary

  

(base) 

duc-/duct- [from Latin]

 

 (verb)

to lead

 

  

to conduct [literally, ‘to lead together with;’ to direct, lead, or guide; to transmit heat, light, sound, or an electrical discharge.]

to deduce

to induce

to introduce [literally, ‘to lead within;’ to present someone or something for the first time to another person or group of persons.]

reduction [literally, ‘leading back;’ bringing down in size or degree.]

to seduce [literally, ‘to lead by itself;’ to lead away from accepted ethical principles and behavior; to lead astray.]

  

to deduce (verb) [literally, ‘to lead down from;’ to reason from a generalization to particulars.]

to induce (verb) [literally, ‘to lead into or unto;’ to reason from particulars to a generalization; to produce a course of action by force or persuasion.]

(base) 

agog(ue)- [from Greek]

 

(verb)

to lead

 

  

demagogue

glucagon [literally, ‘leading the sweet;’ a pancreatic hormone that stimulates an increase in blood sugar levels, thereby opposing the action of insulin.]

hypnagogic [literally, ‘leading to sleep;’ inducing sleep; soporific.]

mystagogue [literally, ‘leader of a mystery candidate;’ person who prepares candidates for initiation into a mystery or mystery religion.]

pedagogy [literally, ‘child leading;’ the technique or profession of teaching.]

synagogue

  

demagogue (noun) [literally, ‘leader of a people;’ a charismatic person who gains power by appealing to the irrational passions of the mass of persons.]

synagogue (noun) [literally, ‘a leading together;’ the house of worship in the Jewish faith.]

Latin and Greek Roots of English Vocabulary: An Online Manual: Lesson 29 [greg-/grex-]

June 6, 2010

Root

 

Original Meaning/

Usage Notes

English Derivatives

 

Vocabulary

 

(base)

greg-/grex- [from Latin]

 

(noun)

flock

 

 

to aggregate [literally, ‘to flock toward;’ to gather together into a mass or whole.]

congregation

egregious

gregarious [literally, ‘of the flock;’ naturally sociable or friendly.]

grex [literally, ‘flock;’ in Botany, a classification for cultivated plants derived from the same hybrid.]

to segregate [literally, ‘to flock apart;’ to separate oneself or a designated group from the rest of society.]

 

congregation (noun) [literally, ‘a flocking together;’ a group of persons assembled for a specific purpose, especially for religious worship.]

egregious (adjective) [literally, ‘out of the flock;’ strikingly inept or offensive or superfluous.]

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