51Թ

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onomatology

[ on-uh-muh-tol-uh-jee ]

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Other 51Թ Forms

  • Dz····Dz· [on-, uh, -mat-l-, oj, -ik], Dzo·o·Dzi· adjective
  • Dzo·o·Dzi··ly adverb
  • Dzo··ٴDZo· noun
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of onomatology1

1840–50; < Medieval Greek DzԴdzٴDZDzí, equivalent to Greek DzԴdzٴDZó ( os ) collector of words ( onomato-, combining form of óԴdz name + -logos; logos ) + -ia -ia; -logy
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

This is not a study in onomatology, though the Smiths in turn may well have been descended from extremely skilled craftsmen, and directed that skill towards the written word.

From

Onomatology, on-ō-ma-tol′o-ji, n. the science of, or a treatise on, the derivation of names.—n.

From

Look, for instance, at his ingenious quaintness in the matter of onomatology.

From

It was given out at the Bronx that our field expedition to Baffin Land was to be undertaken solely for the purpose of bringing back living specimens of the five-spotted Arctic woodcock—Philohela quinquemaculata—in order to add to our onomatology and our glossary of onomatopoeia an ontogenesis of this important but hitherto unstudied sub-species.

From

Recent manifestations of an increasing interest in Indian onomatology, or at least of awakened curiosity to discover the meanings of Indian names, may perhaps justify the writer in offering, at the close of this paper, a few suggestions, as to the method of analysis which appears most likely to give correct results, and as to the tests by which to judge of the probability that a supposed translation of any name is the true one.

From

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onomasticsonomatopoeia