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etymologies Meaning in Hindi (शब्द के हिंदी अर्थ)


etymologies ka kya matlab hota hai


एटिमोलॉजीज

Noun:

शब्द-साधन, शब्द-व्युपत्ति, शब्द-व्युपत्तिशास्र,



etymologies शब्द के हिंदी अर्थ का उदाहरण:

জজজ

फलस्वरूप, भावपूर्ण शक्तियों वाले प्रतीक ग़लत शब्द-साधनों (एटीमोलोजीज़) के अनुरूप समस्याएं लाते हैं।

etymologies's Usage Examples:

It is a manual of "popular mythology as expounded in the etymological and symbolical interpretations of the Stoics" (Sandys), and although marred by many absurd etymologies, abounds in beautiful thoughts (ed.


Varro's etymologies could be only a priori guesses, but he was well aware of their character, and very clearly states at the outset of the fifth book the hindrances that barred the way to sound knowledge.


Bochart was a man of profound erudition; he possessed a thorough knowledge of the principal Oriental languages, including Hebrew, Syriac, Chaldaic and Arabic; and at an advanced age he wished to learn Ethiopic. He was so absorbed in his favourite study, that he saw Phoenician and nothing but Phoenician in everything, even in Celtic words, and hence the number of chimerical etymologies which swarm in his works.


I), was supported by the etymologies and other data supplied by the early chapters of Genesis.


In the grammatical interpretation of his author's language, Servius does not rise above the stiff and overwrought subtleties of his time; while his etymologies, as is natural, violate every law of sound and sense.


His etymologies are of course sometimes very wild: e.g.


Various etymologies of the name have been suggested: "without a lip" (a, xe7Xos), Achilles being regarded as a river-god, a stream which overflows its banks, or, referring to the story that, when Thetis laid him in the fire, one of his lips, which he had licked, was consumed (Tzetzes on Lycophron, 178); "restrainer of the people" (ExE -Xaos); "healer of sorrow" (ax�-X os); "the obscure" (connected with axXbs, "mist"); "snakeborn" (g xts), the snake being one of the chief forms taken by Thetis.


Other suggested etymologies are: (i) from the Sabine town Cures; (2) from curia, i.e.


The regular form of her name in Greek was Persephone, but various other forms occur: Phersephone, Persephassa, Phersephassa, Pherrephatta, 'c., to explain which different etymologies were invented.


Several etymologies have been proposed: e.g.



Synonyms:

linguistics, lexicostatistics,



Antonyms:

debit, direct discourse, indirect discourse,



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