scopo-, scop-, scept-, skept-, -scope-, -scopy, -scopia, -scopic, -scopist

(Greek > Latin: see, view, sight, look, look at, examine, behold, consider)

nooscopic
A reference to nooscopy or a mental examination.
nooscopy
An examination of the mind.
novoscope (s) (noun), novoscopes (pl)
An instrument formerly used for auscultatory (ear) percussion.
odorscope, odoroscope
An instrument devised by Edison for determining or testing an odor.
oneiroscopist
A specialist in the analysis of dreeams.
oneiroscopy
Analysis of dreams as an aid in the diagnosis of a person's mental state or other disorders.
ooscope
An instrument for examining the inside or interior aspects of eggs.
ooscopy
The observation or examination of the development of an embryo inside an egg by means of an ooscope.
opeidoscope
An instrument invented by Prof. A. E. Dolbear (West Virginia), consisting of a tube closed at one end by a tense membrane, having attached to its center a small mirror, to show the musical vibration caused by speaking or singing at the open end.
ophthalmodiaphanoscope
1. An instrument for viewing the interior of the eye by transmitted light.
2. An instrument to examine the interior or the retina of the eye by transillumination.
ophthalmoscope
A lighted instrument, one of the most important tools of the physician, used to examine the interiors of the eyes, including the lenses, retinas, and optic nerves.
ophthalmoscopy
Examination of the interiors of the eyes, including the lenses, retinas, and optic nerves.
organoscopy
Examination of the organs; another name for phrenology (the scientific study or theory of mental faculties; specifically, the theory that the mental powers of the individual consist of separate faculties, each of which has its organ and location in a definite region of the surface of the brain, the size or development of which is commensurate with the development of the particular faculty. The study of the external conformation of the cranium as an index to the development and position of these organs, and thus of the degree of development of the various faculties).
ornithoscopy
1. The observation of birds and their habits.
2. A form of divination, or fortune telling, involving the observation of birds, especially in flight.
orthodiascope
An instrument that uses a radiologic method of obtaining a non-magnified image of the heart or other structures, by direct tracing of its silhouette as projected on a fluoroscopic screen.

Cross references of word families that are related directly, or indirectly, to: "appear, visible, visual, manifest, show, see, reveal, look": blep-; delo-; demonstra-; opt-; -orama; pare-; phanero-; phant-; pheno-; spec-; vela-, veal-; video-, visuo-.