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anthropo-
a learned borrowing from Greek meaning “human,” used in the formation of compound words.
anthropometry.
anthropo-
combining form
indicating man or human
anthropology
anthropomorphism
Word History and Origins
Origin of anthropo-1
Word History and Origins
Origin of anthropo-1
Example Sentences
The term "Anthropocene" comes from the Greek for human, "anthropo".
Some have proposed calling our current geological age the "Anthropocene," derived from the Greek word "anthropo" for "human."
In 2019, they reached agreement: If you’re alive now you live in the Anthropocene — a geologic epoch incorporating humans in its very definition: “Anthropo,” as in anthropology, meaning “human”; and “cene,” as in so many recent geologic epochs — Miocene, Pleistocene — meaning “recent” or “new.”
“There is a feeling among the archaeologists that because the word ‘anthropo’ is in there, their science should be central,” one geologist complained to me privately.
“Anthropo,” from the Greek word for human, also is part of the show’s title.
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When To Use
Anthropo- is a combining form used like a prefix meaning “human.” It is often used in scientific and other technical terms, including in the social sciences.Anthropo- comes from the Greek ánthrōpos, meaning “human being” or "man."What are variants of anthropo-?When combined with words or word elements that begin with a vowel, anthropo- becomes anthrop-, as in anthropoid.
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