etymological

IPA: ɛtʌmʌɫˈɑdʒʌkʌɫ

adjective

  • (not comparable) Of or relating to etymology.
  • (comparable) (of a word) Consistent with its etymological characteristics (in historical usage and/or the source language).
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Examples of "etymological" in Sentences

  • I wouldn’t blame you; this is a commonly-held belief known as the etymological fallacy.
  • The word chowder has its etymological roots in the Latin word caldaria, meaning a place to warm things and later a cooking pot.
  • Martin accuses the English translators of interpreting such words in their "etymological" sense, and consulting profane writers, Homer,
  • It has divided Ruthenian writers into two great camps: the "etymological", which retains the old system of spelling, and the "phonetic", which advocates the new system.
  • One of the things I've found irritating about Japanese kokugo-jiten is the absence of the kind of etymological information we take for granted in most of our English dictionaries.
  • I cannot crawl into the minds of the youngest generation of psychologists to learn whether exceptional still carries what I must regard, personally, to be the unconscionable semantic distortion, both denotative and connotative, introduced a generation ago using "etymological" grounds for justification.
  • Ne + cedere is the root = “not” + “withdraw” — in other words the etymological premise of the idea in the word is a PRESUMPTION of deference or cession of power, which cession or deference is foregone or abandoned ONLY in the “necessary” case and then only to the degree “proper” or “belonging to” the isolated occasion or circumstance giving rise to the necessity that overcomes the presumption.
  • Incidentally, Tennyson’s “samite” (inMorte d’Arthur, as worn by the disembodied arm that belongs to the Lady of the Lake) was a brilliantly contrived exercise in etymological archaeology, and strictly speakingmeant (via the Latin samitum and, in turn, the Greek hexamiton) a six-ply silk brocade incorporating gold and silver threads, much in vogue during the Middle Ages, but let us not be deflected.

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synonyms for etymological
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