Παρασκευή 14 Ιουνίου 2013

პარატიფი • (paratip'i) =paratyphoid=παράτυφος

პარატიფი • (paratip'i) =paratyphoid=παράτυφος

ONLINE ETYMOLOGY DICTIONARY

para- + typhoid

typhoid (adj.) Look up typhoid at Dictionary.com
1800, literally "resembling typhus," from typhus + suffix from Greek -oeides "like," from eidos "form, shape" (see -oid). The noun is from 1861, a shortened form of typhoid fever (1845), so called because it was originally thought to be a variety of typhus. Typhoid Mary (1909) was Mary Mallon (d.1938), a typhoid carrier who worked as a cook and became notorious after it was learned she had unwittingly infected hundreds in U.S.

typhus (n.) Look up typhus at Dictionary.com
acute infectious fever, 1785, from Modern Latin (De Sauvages, 1759), from Greek typhos "stupor caused by fever," literally "smoke," from typhein "to smoke," related to typhos "blind," typhon "whirlwind," ultimately origin unknown. The disease so called from the prostration that it causes.

-oid Look up -oid at Dictionary.com
word-forming element meaning "like, like that of, thing like a ______," from Latinized form of Greek -oeides, from eidos "form," related to idein "to see," eidenai "to know;" literally "to see," from PIE *weid-es-, from root *weid- "to see, to know" (see vision). The -o- is connective or a stem vowel from the previous element.

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