Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

poly-

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Remove ads

English

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much), from Proto-Indo-European *polh₁ús (much, many). Unrelated to -poly.

Pronunciation

Prefix

poly-

  1. many
    polydactyl, polyglot, polyvalent
    Synonyms: multi-; pleo-, pleio-
    Antonyms: mono-, uni-
    Coordinate terms: bi-, di-, tri-, etc; oligo-, pauci-
  2. polymer
    polyacetal, polyethene, polyether
  3. polyamory
    polycule, polyphobia, polyfamily

Derived terms

Translations

References

Further reading

Anagrams

Remove ads

Danish

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much), from Proto-Indo-European *polh₁ús (much, many).

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly-
    Synonym: fler-
    Antonym: mono-

Derived terms

References

Dutch

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much), from Proto-Indo-European *polh₁ús (much, many).

Pronunciation

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly-

Derived terms

Finnish

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πολύς (polús).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpoly/, [ˈpo̞ly]
  • IPA(key): /ˈpolu/, [ˈpo̞lu]

Prefix

poly-

  1. (chiefly in loanwords) poly-

Usage notes

Terms that violate Finnish vowel harmony are occasionally adapted to fit it, particularly in colloquial speech. As such, poly- may be pronounced polu-.

Derived terms

Remove ads

French

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much), from Proto-Indo-European *polh₁ús (much, many).

Pronunciation

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly- (many)
    Synonyms: multi-, pluri-
    Antonyms: mono-, uni-

Derived terms

Remove ads

German

Etymology

Ultimately from Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much).

Pronunciation

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly-

Derived terms

Remove ads

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much), from Proto-Indo-European *polh₁ús (much, many). Related to full and fleire.

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly-
    Synonyms: fleir-, mange-
    Antonym: (often) mono-

Derived terms

References

Welsh

Etymology

Borrowed from English poly-, from Ancient Greek πολύς (polús, many, much).

Prefix

poly-

  1. poly-
    poly- + -merpolymer
    poly- + sacarid (saccharide)polysacarid (polysaccharide)

Synonyms

Derived terms

Mutation

More information radical, soft ...

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Remove ads

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads