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Etymology of tetrarch by etymonline


Etymology of tetrarch by etymonline

"ruler of one of four divisions of a kingdom or province," in the Roman Empire in… See origin and meaning of tetrarch.

Etymology of tetrapod by etymonline

"four-footed animal, quadruped," 1826, from Modern Latin tetrapodus, from Greek tetrapous "four-footed," as a noun, "four-footed animal," from ...

tetrarch - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Noun · A governor or ruler of a quarter of a country, especially of a fourth part of a province in or client state of Ancient Rome. · Each of the four members of ...

Etymology of tetragrammaton by etymonline

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "four." It forms all or part of: cadre; cahier; carillon; carrefour; catty-cornered; diatessaron; escadrille; ...

Etymology of tetrahedron by etymonline

"four-sided," from tetra- "four" (from PIE root *kwetwer- "four") + hedra "seat, base, chair, face of a geometric solid" (from PIE root *sed- (1) ...

Etymology of tetrad by etymonline

"the number four, collection of four things," 1650s, from Greek tetras (combining form tetrad-) "group of four, number four" (from PIE root * ...

Etymology of root *kwetwer- by etymonline

*kwetwer- ... Proto-Indo-European root meaning "four." ... 2) "square-headed bolt for a crossbow;" quarry (n.2) "open place where rocks are ...

Etymonline English Dictionary on the App Store

The official, complete app of Douglas Harper's Online Etymology Dictionary, with useful features to help you understand the origins of words as well as ...

Etymology of firkin by etymonline

"small cask," late 14c., apparently from Middle Dutch *vierdekijn, diminutive of vierde, literally "fourth, fourth part" (from vier "four," from ...

tetrarch, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary

The earliest known use of the noun tetrarch is in the Middle English period (1150—1500). OED's earliest evidence for tetrarch is from around 1384, in Bible ( ...

Etymology of tetrameter by etymonline

"having four measures," from tetra- "four" (from PIE root *kwetwer- "four") + metron "poetic meter, measure" (see meter (n.1)). The English ...

Etymology of cadre by etymonline

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "four." ... 2) "square-headed bolt for a crossbow;" quarry (n.2) "open place where rocks are excavated;" quart; ...

Etymology of tessellated by etymonline

1650s, "minute arrangement of parts or colors," noun of action from Late Latin tessellatus "made of small, square stones or tiles" (see ...

Etymonline - Dictionary & More - Apps on Google Play

The official, complete app of Douglas Harper's Online Etymology Dictionary, with useful features to help you understand the origins of words ...

Etymology of quatrain by etymonline

"stanza of fourteen lines rhyming alternately," 1580s, from French quatrain "four-line stanza" (16c.), from Old French quatre "four," from Latin ...

Tetrarch Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

Word History ; Etymology. Middle English, from Latin tetrarcha, from Greek tetrarchēs, from tetra- + -archēs -arch ; First Known Use. 12th century ...

Vicus

Lictor · Magister militum · Imperator · Princeps senatus · Pontifex maximus · Augustus · Caesar · Tetrarch · Other countries ... "Online Etymology Dictionary".

Etymology of quadruped by etymonline

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "four." ... 2) "square-headed bolt for a crossbow;" quarry (n.2) "open place where rocks are excavated;" quart; ...

Numbers – Language Log

... tetrarch; trapezium. [T]he hypothetical source of ... (etymonline). See also kwetwer- in The American ... etymology with Hittite paršanaš 'leopard ...

Etymology of quadroon by etymonline

Proto-Indo-European root meaning "four." It forms all or part of: cadre; cahier; carillon; carrefour; catty-cornered; diatessaron; escadrille; ...