Value | Position | |
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Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15139 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 88 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 434967 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/4/2024 7:10:22 AM"
In medicine it is the "study of diseases" and also a way of calling the set of symptoms of a disease. By association, the problems or defects of a set in other fields such as sociology or engineering. It consists of the Greek voices 960; 945; 952; 959; 962; ( pathos "disease, suffering" ) 955; 959; 947; 953; 945; ( lodge "knowledge, study") .
It is the ability to perform a job. The term is extended to the food needed to perform the work, including food that produces chemical energy to an organism, or electricity that directly moves a machine. Also figuratively is the vitality and willpower for a task. It is a word that comes to us from late Latin, but its etymology is Greek as 949; 957; ( in "inside" ) 949; 961; 947; 959; 957; ( ergon "work") .
It is a science that studies in parallel the literature and voices of a language with its culture and customs, by the way in which one influences the other. It comes from the Greek 966; 953; 955; 959; 962; ( filos "friend , associate" ) 955; 959; 947; 953; 945; ( lodge "knowledge [for this case, of words]" ) .
It is the writing, the daily writing of a diary in its meanings of "printed newspaper of news that is published every day", and in that of "book or notebook where daily personal experiences are written" as a literary genre. It is also said of its study, although it is not etymologically correct. Another use of the term is in fact lists or indexes sorted day by day. From the Greek 951; 956; 949; 961; 945; ( hemera "day" ) 947; 961; 945; 966; 949; 953; 957; ( grafein "write" ) .
Appearance of a divinity before men. It has Greek origin: 952; 949; 959; 962; ( theos "god") 966; 945; 957; 949; 953; 957; ( fanein "appear" ) . [Note: in the definition of colleague Danilo Enrique Noreña Benítez there is a confusion with the neologism theophony, which while it may also be a theophany, only refers to the singing, to the voice, to the heard word of a deity.]