You searched for: “kind
Units related to: “kind
(Greek > Latin: race, kind; line of descent; origin, creation; pertaining to sexual relations, reproduction, or heredity; and more recently, a gene or genes)
(Latin: birth, beget; descent, origin, creation, inception, beginning, race, sort; kind, class)
(Latin: from pius, dutiful, dutiful conduct; kind, kindness; devout; compassion)
(Latin: a kind of short sword or scimiter)
(Latin: suffix; forming nouns and verbs; an action done; the product of or a result of some kind of material or a process of doing something)
(Latin: suffix; pertaining to, like, of the kind of, relating to, characterized by, belonging to; action of, process of)
(a different kind of vocabulary lexicon that emphasizes English words primarily from Latin and Greek origins)
(Greek > Latin: dragon; a kind of serpent; snake; a kind of fish; by extension, a festering sore)
(Latin: to be lenient [toward], accede, take pleasure [in]; originally, "to be kind, kindness; to be long-suffering, to be patient")
(Greek > Latin: a kind of whale; large sea creature)
(Latin: of what sort; of what kind; how constituted)
(Greek: a trickling; oozing; to drip, dripping; denoting a flow of some kind, or from some source)
(Latin: talis, "such like" or "such"; talio, "punishment equal in severity to the wrong that occasioned it" or "exaction of payment or payment in kind")
(Greek: a suffix referring to a device, tool, or instrument; more generally, used in the names of any kind of chamber or apparatus used in experiments)
(Greek > Latin: to beat, to strike; a blow; a dent, an impression, a mark, original form; a mold; a figure, an image, a form, a kind)
(Greek: diseases communicated from one kind of animal to another or to human beings; usually restricted to diseases transmitted naturally to man from animals)
(Greek: diseases communicated from one kind of animal to another or to human beings; usually restricted to diseases transmitted naturally to man from animals)
Word Entries containing the term: “kind
more than unique—it's practically one of a kind *
This entry is located in the following unit: Pleonasms or Tautological Redundancies (page 14)