Sentences with phrase «etymology of the word»

I am dealing with etymology of the word homosexual and the concept of same - sex relationships in history.
Is the implication of your article that we should accept the medieval etymology of the word conception as the true definition of the beginning of life, when the embryo is «imbraced» by the womb and therefore viable?
The medieval etymology of the word conception, said Harvard biologist John Biggers, traces it to the Latin root capio, which means to grasp, take hold, or receive into the body.
Etymology of the Word God Discusses the root - meaning of the name God, which is derived from Gothic and Sanskrit roots.
Acts of process seem paramount in your earlier work but not in the modernist etymology of word, not by revealing the making of the thing but rather reacting to it, altering the thing's physical state by responding to its raison d'être.
To understand it better we have to get into the etymology of the word «Fiat» — which in latin means «let it be done» or «it shall be».
One of the most basic is that the actual phrase is עין תחת עין — the etymology of the word «tahat» comes from «in place of».
This is the ultimate estrangement of despair; whose meaning is indicated in the etymology of the word — without hope.
«Moving these «holydays» (how the etymology of that word says so much about what they were to our culture) represents a symbolic retreat of huge proportions; conceding the notion that the secular world and the imperative of its ephemeral commitments must now be considered more real than the way in which the divine has entered our history and shaped it.»
The depiction of consubstantiality points out where persons «stand together» (from the etymology of the word) and shows how they share a similar concern or interest.17
As already pointed out above, organic evolution is not what the etymology of the word «evolution» suggests, i.e., not unfoldment of what was there hidden to begin with.
Your examination of the etymology of the word «sin» is laudatory, yet your entire system, (the «salvation paradigm»), is built on a fallacious interpretation of an Ancient Near Eastern Choas Myth, (the «fall»), and the need for a «christ» / savior in the first place.
It's funny that an atheist wouldn't even understand the etymology of the word
So it does not matter at all if Christians invoke Jesus» name or athiests wish you a good morning (check the etymology of the word «good») it is all the same.
Applied science is an art, as the etymology of the word «technical» (from the Greek, techne, «an art») attests.
The etymology of the word is to reject theism, which is belief in a God.
There is even controversy over the etymology of the word «curry.»
For what it's worth, the etymology of the word «Cyrus» runs the gamut from «the sun,» «young,» and «caregiver,» to «humiliator of the enemy in a verbal contest.»
Still, it's so gorgeous, so glowering, so obviously the product of a master filmmaker, that its various wounds (and Von Sydow offers a wonderful monologue about the etymology of that word, «wound») aren't fatal until it tries too hard, in a pair of extended chamber - denouements, to explain away everything that was better left inexplicable.
I read this while commuting to work on a ferry and soaked up all things nautical: the etymology of the word knot, the strategy of the ship's owners, and sailors» superstitions about renaming a ship (don't do it!)
Could anyone elaborate on the etymology of the words.
The etymology of the word is the French portemanteau, from porter, to carry, and manteau, cloak (from Old French mantel, from Latin mantellum).»
It is luggage, but in fact: «The etymology of the word is the French portemanteau, from porter, to carry, and manteau, cloak (from Old French mantel, from Latin mantellum).»
Regardless, the etymology of the word is the same: based on the Greek φῶς (phōs), meaning «light» and γραφή (graphê), meaning «drawing, writing,» together meaning «drawing with light».
Norment is acutely aware of the etymology of the word lullaby.
The etymology of the word abstract is abstrahere, which means to «draw off.»
Since graduating from Middlesex University in 2014, Alton has undertaken a series of artistic projects, most notably English Disco Lovers (2013), a satirical protest group that he founded, which subverted the meaning of the English Defence League's abbreviation, as well as the etymology of the word disco, which derives from «discotheque», a French word meaning «record library».
Bui told me, «It is the curator's role to amplify the artist's message, and to enhance the understanding of the public» and, drawing from the etymology of the word «curator,» he continued, «to protect the sacredness of the work of art, the spiritual dimension of artistic practice.»
Fear not, we aren't looking to bore you with the etymology of the word and how it has evolved over time, but rather to examine what it means in practice.
Recognising that these years of Latin may finally have been worth their while, I would suggest that the etymology of the word supports my theory (inter: between; cipere: catch).
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