Word Unit: -emia, -aemia + (Greek: a suffix; blood, usually a diseased condition of the blood)

Inter-related cross references, directly or indirectly, involving "blood" word units: angi-; apheresis; hemo-; hemoglobin-; phleb-; sangui-; vas-; vascul-.

Word Unit: empori- (Greek > Latin: traveler, trader, merchant; a trading place, market; pertaining to trade or traveling)
Word Unit: emul- (Latin: striving to equal; rivaling or competing with; imitate, imitating; trying to do something as well as or better than another system, person, or other people)

Inter-related cross references, directly or indirectly, involving word units dealing with "equal, identical, same, similar": auto-; equ-, equi-; homeo-; homo-; iso-; pari-; peer; rhomb-; syn-; tauto-.

Word Unit: en-, em-, el- (Greek: in, into, inward; within; near, at; to put, to go into, or to cover with; as, entomb, encamp, enfold; to provide with; as, to enlighten; to cause to be; as, to enlarge; thoroughly; as, enmesh; in, within, into; as enzootic)
Word Unit: enantio- + (Greek: opposite, opposing, over against; [en- + anti])
Word Unit: -ence, -ency (Latin: a suffix that forms nouns; action, process, state, quality, or condition of)
Word Unit: encephalo-, encephal- (Greek: brain; that which is inside the head)
Word Unit: encomi- (Greek > Latin: praise, approval, acclamation)
Word Unit: endo-, end- (Greek: within, inside, into, in, on, inner)

Inter-related cross references, directly or indirectly, involving word units dealing with "form, shape, appearance": figur-; form-; icono-; ideo-; imag-; morpho-; -oid; typo-.

Word Unit: endothelio- + (Greek > Latin: layer of simple cells lining the inner surface of the circulatory organs)

A cross reference of word units that are related, directly or indirectly, to "cell, cells, cell nucleus": celli-; cellulo-; cyto-; gameto-; glio-; kary-, karyo-; neuro-.

Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 01 (Indo-European is believed to be the origin of many modern languages)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 02 (The Celts settled in Britain in about 500 B.C.)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 03 (The Romans invaded Britain and ruled the Celts from A.D. 43-410)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 04 (The Romans were apparently never able to conquer the northern Picts)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 05 (The Warrior Queen of the Iceni, Boudicca, Bodicea, or Boadicea, meaning "Victory", defied and attacked the Romans with her Iceni warriors, and was the embodiment of a people's hatred of Roman mistreatment)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 06 (Under Hadrian, the Romans built a wall to protect themselves from the Picts in Northern Britain)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 07 (the northern Picts broke through Hadrian's wall)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 08 (Roman troops went back to Italy to defend Rome)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 09 (the last Roman legions and trained British auxiliaries withdrew from Britain)
Word Unit: English and Its Historical Development, Part 10 (Old English Period)