idio-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- One's own; private; personal:
自己的;私人的:
idiolect.
个人语型 - Distinct; separate:
独特的;分离的:
idioblast.
异形细胞
语源
- Greek
希腊语 - from idios [personal, private] * see s(w)e-
源自 idios [个人的,私人的] *参见 s(w)e-
idio-
combining form
indicating peculiarity, isolation, or that which pertains to an individual person or thing
⇒
idiolect
Origin
from Greek idios private, separateidio-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “proper to one,” “peculiar,” used in the formation of compound words:
idiomorphic.
Origin
< Greek, combining form of ídios (one's) own, personal, private, separate, distinct
Related Words
- idiocrasy
- idioglossia
- idiosyncrasy
- idioblast
- idiochromatic
- idiodynamic
idio-a word element meaning 'peculiar' or 'proper to one', as in idiosyncrasy.
[Greek, combining form of idios own, private, peculiar]idio-
combining form
idioblast
combining form
ETYMOLOGY Greek, from idios — more at idiot
: one's own : personal : separate : distinctidioblast
idio-
combining form
- personal; own表示“个人的”, “自己的”:
-
idiotype.
词源
from Greek idios 'own, distinct'.
1905 Science 20 Oct. 500/2 In type B all of the spermatozoa contain the same number of chromosomes.., but they are..of two classes, one of which contains a large and one a small ‘*idiochromosome’.
1920 L. Doncaster Introd. StudyCytol. xi. 159Most frequently the idio-chromosomes lag behind the autosomes in the spermatocyte anaphases, and the presence of such a lagging pair has sometimes been the first observed indication of the existence of a pair of idio-chromosomes.
1878 T. Sinclair Mount 103No Jew of them all would..set up a theocracy, or *idiocracy, for this is the exact word, more eagerly and remorselessly.
1890 Athenæum 29 Mar. 408/3 ‘On Bertrand's *Idiocyclophanous Prism’, by Prof. S. P. Thompson.
1883 E. R. Lankester in Encycl. Brit. XVI. 682/1 note,The Porodinic group is divisible into Nephrodinic and *Idiodinic, in the former the nephridium serving as a pore, in the latter a special (ἴδιος) pore being developed.
1828 Webster, *Idioelectric, electric per se, or containing electricity in its natural state. Gregory.
1830 R. Knox Béclard'sAnat. 160They are idio-electric. [ hairs]
1891 White & Bird in Proc. R.Med. Chirurg.Soc. Lond. III. 92The two children..express themselves in..sounds..unlike those of any known language, but the same sound is always used by the same child to express the same word. Each child has thus a language of its own, and the authors have named the defect to which this peculiarity is due ‘*Idioglossia’.
1940 Nature 6 July 33/1 A child may develop idioglossia, that is, a language of its own; this is not a gibberish but is found on study to be subject to certain laws of sound-changes.
1961 W. R. Brain Speech Disorders xii. 137For a number of years the child may not speak at all. Sooner or later, however, most patients acquire a vocabulary of their own which is comprehensible only to those who have been closely associated with them. This defective form of speech is called ‘idioglossia’ and ‘lalling’, and constitutes one form of dyslalia.
1888 H. Hale in Science 28 Sept. 146/1The boy soon gave up his *idioglottic endeavors.
1883 E. R. Lankester in Encycl. Brit. XVI. 682/1 note,The genital ducts of Idiodinic forms may be called *Idiogonaducts, as distinguished from the Nephrogonaducts of nephrodinic forms.
1623 Cockeram, *Idiograph, priuate writings.
1656 Blount Glossogr.,Idiograph, a private writing, or of one's own hand writing.
1897 Westm. Gaz. 27 Nov. 8/2He had asked Sir William how he wrote his name phonetically, and he had given him an idiograph.
[ 1894W. Windelband Geschichte & Naturwissenschaft (1904) 12Das wissenschaftliche Denken ist—wenn man neue Kunstausdrücke bilden darf—in dem einen Falle nomothetisch, in dem andern idiographisch. ]
1909 Cent. Dict. Suppl. , *Idiographic.
1931 A. Wolf in W. Rose Outl. Mod. Knowl. 570History..is idiographic, that is to say, it is concerned with individuals and individual events in all their particularity.
a1943 R. G. Collingwood (1946) Idea ofHist. 166Idiographic science, which is history.
1971 Jrnl. Gen. Psychol. Apr. 320The findings imply that it is possible to study both normative and idiographic data about the emotional response to sound.
1931 Robbins & Stinchfield Dict. Terms Disorders Speech (Amer. Speech & HealingAssoc. ) 15*Idiolalia, a form of dyslalia characterized by so extreme vowel and consonant substitution that a child's speech may be made unintelligible and appear to be another language to one who has not the key to the literal changes; but the same word is always used to express the same idea.
1933 S. M. Stinchfield Speech Disorders iii. 51Idiolalia. This is a form of dyslalia characterized by the substitution of unusual and inaccurate sounds for vowels and consonants..; the same sound..is always used to express the same idea, however. Many refer to it as idioglossia.
a1626 Bp. AndrewesSerm. (1841–4) II. 393 (Cent. )Idolatry..differs but a letter from *idiolatry.
1881 Daily News 19 Sept. 6/2 The *idiometer invented by Colonel Walker was adopted by the Indian Survey Department.
1878 Foster Phys. i. ii. §2. 72The wheal in many respects resembles a very slow or almost fixed contraction-wave, and has been called an ‘*idio-muscular’ contraction.
1896 Allbutt Syst. Med. I. 109The belief in the idiomuscular or, more truly, *idioneural action of the heart-muscle.
1651 Biggs New Disp. ⁋234We have assigned the precedency and priority to purges from regular *Idionomy and propriety of natures with their appellatives.
[ 1913C. Sachs Real-Lexikon der Musikinstrumente 195/1Wir schlagen deshalb vor, dieser Klasse die Bezeichnung ‘Idiophone’, also ‘ihrer Natur nach klingende’ Instrumente zu geben. ]
1940 C. Sachs Hist. Mus. Instrum. (1942) 455The first of the five main classes is called *idiophones.
1954 . [ see autophone 2]
1970 W. Apel HarvardDict. Mus. (ed. 2) 414/1Idiophones. Struck: triangle, gong, bell . Shaken: rattle, sistrum, crescent. Plucked: Jew's harp, music box. Rubbed: glass harmonica, nail violin. [ etc.]
1971 Sci. Amer. Dec. 92/1The instrument used to send messages in the Upper Congo is made solely of wood, and the entire instrument vibrates when it is struck. It is thus an idiophone, like metal gongs and the wood and metal bars of the xylophone and the glockenspiel.
1955 A. A. Hill in Q.Jrnl. Speech XLI. 255The old concept of the phoneme turned on individual speech, the idiolect. Individual phonemic structures are therefore structures of *idiophonemes.
1958 ― Introd. Ling. Struct. iv. 58Phonemes in individual speech can be called ‘idiophonemes’.
Ibid. iv. 60Irregularities can characterize the over-all pattern as well as the *idiophonemic patterns.
1959 Amer. Speech XXXIV. 265The diaphonemic inventory is a composite of all the idiophonemic inventories.
1889 Mivart in DublinRev. Oct. 293Thus the *idio-plasm was changed more and more in the course of generations.
1890 Weismann in Nature 6 Feb. 320The *idioplasmatic nature of the nuclear substance.
1886 F. L. Patton in New PrincetonRev. Mar. 181‘*Idiopsychological’ and ‘heteropsychological’ are the epithets employed to denote these two methods.
c1833 W. H. Brookfield in Life Tennyson (1897) I. 126At autopsychography I am not good, if I had any *idiopsychology to autopsychographize.
1828 Webster, *Idio-repulsive, repulsive by itself; as, the idio-repulsive power of heat.
1843 Grove Corr. Phys. Forces (1846) 23The early theories regard its phenomena as produced either by a single fluid idio-repulsive, but attractive of all matter, or else as produced by two fluids, each idio-repulsive but attractive of the other.
1890 Billings Med. Dict. 679/2*Idioretinal light.
1929 C. Murchison Found. Exper. Psychol. iv. 183If the intensity of the stimulus is zero over the entire area of the retina, the accompanying experience is not typically a black, but is, instead, a dark gray, which is sometimes known as the ‘idioretinal light’ and is attributed to retinal self-excitation.
1938 R. S. Woodworth Exper. Psychol. xxii. 540The readiest way of experiencing expanse color is to close the eyes and observe the gray field of idioretinal light.
1862 Lond. Rev. 17 May,They live..in regular monasteries, either of the stricter cœnobitic form..or under the laxer *idiorrythmic constitution.
1934 Downside Rev. LII. 483But Mount Athos in 1928 still had nearly 5,000 monks, including the ‘idiorrhythmics’ with their very special kind of life.
1957 Oxf. Dict. Chr. Ch. 676/2Idiorrhythmic, a term applied to certain monasteries on Mount Athos.
1960 D. Athill tr. Valentin's Monks ofMt. Athos 45But the idiorhythmics keep their property? Indeed they do, and they have to look after it as well as possible because on their death everything they own goes to the monastery.
1880 J. E. H. Gordon Electr. &Magn. I. ix. 56The accessory electrometer, or gauge, is called an *idiostatic electrometer.
1865–72 Watts Dict. Chem. III. 242*Idiotype, a term applied by Guthrie..to bodies derived by replacement from the same substance, including the typical substance itself; ammonia..is *idiotypic with ethylamine, phenylamine, and all the organic bases derived from it by substitution, and these are idiotypic one with the other.
1909 Heart I. 70 The continuous ventricular rhythm, at about 30 per minute, met with in complete heart-block (*idioventricular rhythm).
1961 Lancet 9 Sept. 575/2 During this interval electrocardiographic monitoring should clarify the diagnosis of..idioventricular rhythm with inadequate cardiac output.
idio-
word-forming element meaning "one's own, personal, distinct," from Greek idio-, comb. form of idios "own, personal, private, one's own" (see idiom).
idio-
combining form
Etymology: Greek, from idios — more at idiot
1. : one's own : personal : separate : distinct
< idiotype >
< idiosyncrasy >
2. : self-produced : arising within
< idiolysin >
< idioreflex >
< idiopathic >
< idioventricular rhythm >
1.
< idiotype >
< idiosyncrasy >
2.
< idiolysin >
< idioreflex >
< idiopathic >
< idioventricular rhythm >
idio-
Prefix
- Forming compound words having the sense of individuality, peculiarity, separateness.
Etymology
Representing a combining form of Ancient Greek ἴδιος (ídios, “own, personal, distinct”).
Derived terms
词根词缀:idio-
【来源及含义】Greek: peculiar, one's own, personal, private; of or pertaining to one's self, distinct, separate, alone
【相关词根词缀】Cross references of word families related to: "individual, personal": pecu-; privat-, priv-.
【同源单词】idioagglutinin, idiobiology, idioblast, idiocaucasian, idiochlotic, idiochromatic