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词汇 eco-
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eco-
pref.(前缀)
  1. Ecology; ecological:
    生态学;生态学的:
    ecosystem.
    生态系统

语源
  1. From ecology
    源自 ecology
eco-

combining form

denoting ecology or ecological
ecocide
ecosphere

eco-

1
a combining form representing ecology, in the formation of compounds (ecosystem; ecotype); also with the more general sense “environment,” “nature,” “natural habitat” (ecocide; ecolaw; ecopolitics).

Related Words

  • ecocatastrophe
  • ecocentrism
  • ecocide
  • ecofallow
  • ecofreak
  • ecohazard
eco-a prefix denoting 'ecology' or 'ecological', as in ecosphere.
eco-
combining form
 ETYMOLOGY  Late Latin oeco- household, from Greek oik-, oiko-, from oikos house — more at vicinity
1. habitat or environment
    ecospecies
2. ecological or environmental
    ecocatastrophe
eco-
/ˈiːkəʊ/  
combining form
representing ecology
表示“生态(的)”, “生态学(的)”。
eco-|iːkəʊ|shortening of ecological, ecology, as in eco-ˈactivist, one who actively opposes the pollution, or destruction by other means, of the environment; ecocaˈtastrophe, major damage to the environment, esp. when caused by human activity; ecoˈcidal a., designed or tending to destroy the environment; ˈecocide, destruction or damage of the environment, esp. intentionally; ˈecofreak colloq., a fanatical conservationist or environmentalist. See also ecoclimate, ecophene, etc.1969Time 10 Oct. 70/1 Last week *eco-activists staged a ‘Damn DDT Day’ in San Francisco's Union Square.1975Weekend Mag. (Montreal) 6 Dec. 28/3 The Greenpeace eco-activists, noted for their campaigns against nuclear testing and the slaughter of whales, are by no means alone in expounding the new planetary morality.1969New Scientist 2 Oct. 18/2 Some major *eco-catastrophes seem bound to occur in the coming decades.1973Science 12 Oct. 173/2 An ecocatastrophe of serious magnitude to the seaward fringe of the Everglades National Park and adjacent areas appears to be in progress.1970Guardian Weekly 15 Aug. 18 Beyond that lie the use of *ecocidal weapons—herbicides in Vietnam—and ‘humane incapacitants’.1973Bull. Peace Proposals IV. i. 84/2 It is also important to distinguish between specific occasions of environmental warfare and persistent patterns of warfare that produce cumulative effects on ecosystems that can be properly called ‘ecocide’ or policies that can be designated ‘ecocidal’.1969Encycl. Sci. Suppl. (Grolier) 159 Discarded automobiles, old newspapers and telephone books, tin cans, nonreturnable bottles—all add to the growing problems of solid-waste disposal... *Ecocide—the murder of the environment—is everybody's business.1972Punch 1 Mar. 298/2 The new word for bravado is custerism. Wilful destruction of the environment is now ecocide.1982New Scientist 3 June 663/1 Olof Palme denounced the Americans for ecocide in Vietnam.1970Natural Hist. Oct. 22/3 I've been an *ecofreak for 30 years.1980Guardian Weekly 11 May 14 Alexandre Hebert,..a staunch anarchist trade unionist, has nothing but disdain for ‘those eco-freaks who want to turn back the wheels of history’. Add: ˈeco-art, art which has an ecological message or purpose.1971New Scientist 2 Sept. 537/3 (heading) *Eco-art.1990Independent 29 May 13/4 Iraqi Neo-Conceptualism (a copy of The Satanic Verses enigmatically sandwiched between marble slabs) neighbours Brazilian Eco-Art (a stand of felled trees that looks like a reproof to the loggers).ˈecodoom, ecological disaster on a large scale.1973Times Lit. Suppl. 5 Jan. 18/1 (heading) *Ecodoom in Eden.1989Lit. Rev. Aug. 41/2 That is not to say doom-laden culture-pessimists are right, any more than the green ecodoom fanatics.ˈecoˌdoomster, one who makes pessimistic forecasts about the environment; a prophet of ‘ecodoom’.1972Times 31 May 14 (heading) Flaws in *ecodoomsters' arguments.1977Time 6 June 53/2 Wilfred Beckerman..has emerged as a kind of St. George against those he calls ‘the eco-doomsters’.ˌecogeoˈgraphic(al a., pertaining to or regarding location and environment.1962Biol. Abstr. XXXVIII. 981/2 *Ecogeographic mechanism of the structural variability of imported plants.1983E. C. Minkoff Evolutionary Biol. xiii. 234/1 The same type of cline, responding to the same climatic variable, may exist in a large number of species and be recognizable in the form of an ecogeographic rule.1956E. Mayr in Evolution X. 105 There is no good, generally accepted collective term available for such rules as Bergmann's rule, Allen's rule, etc... The term *ecogeographical rules, although by no means ideal, will be used.., being less inclusive than the term ecological rules.1973Nature 31 Aug. 575/2 In spite of reproductive and ecogeographical isolations in the late and post-Pleistocene period.1988Evolution XLII. 278/2 These 121 stocks were obtained from various hosts and types of transmission cycle in a broad ecogeographical range.ˈeco-label, a label (on manufactured goods) used to identify products which satisfy certain environmental conditions regarding manufacture, biodegradability, etc.1989Daily Tel. 7 Apr. 5/6 (heading) *Eco-labels on nappies ‘are often misleading’.1990Earth Matters Summer 8/2 Official ‘eco-labels’ have been used in West Germany since 1978.so ˈeco-ˌlabelling, the practice of labelling goods in this way.1989Daily Tel. 7 Apr. 5/6 An official, standardised ‘*eco-labelling’ scheme, on the lines of that established in West Germany.1990New Scientist 16 June 66/3 MPs will follow with interest the progress of the recently formed Eco-Labelling Advisory Group.ˈeco-nut colloq. = ecofreak above.1972Analog Aug. 4/1 In a world where the ‘*econuts’ rage against science and technology, and the scientists dither in dignified confusion.., we have a conflict.1979Radio Times 5 May 89/1 I'm a farmer who's interested in biological husbandry, not an eco-nut who's interested in farming.1990Daily Tel. 14 Aug. 14/5 So the econuts have finally noticed that petrol contains substantial benzene (a suspect carcinogen) and that ‘green-approved’ unleaded petrol contains even more.ˈeco-raider U.S., a person who takes part in (usu. collective) attacks on the property of institutions whose activities are supposedly harmful to the environment.1975E. Abbey Monkey Wrench Gang iv. 48 The newspaper stories mentioned ‘organized bands of environmental activists’, a phrase soon shortened to the much handier and more dramatic ‘*eco-raiders’.1987Chicago Tribune 2 Aug. i. 21/1 Oftentimes..the costumed crusaders will get a chuckle from onlookers who accept the pamphlets signed with such names as ‘Bolt Weevils’, ‘the Tucson Ecoraiders’ or ‘the Bonnie Abbzug Feminist Garden Club’. Add: eco-ˈterrorism, violence carried out to further environmentalist ends; also, politically motivated damage to the natural environment.1990A. Toffler Powershift v. 377 A second wing [of an environmental pressure group]..might well step up from eco-vandalism to full-scale *eco-terrorism to enforce its demands.1991Time 27 May 50/2 Saddam's eco-terrorism raised the amount of carbon dioxide that humans are pumping into the atmosphere by up to 2{pcnt}.1992New Scientist 25 Apr. 8/1 (caption) The Earth Observation Satellite Corporation, which operates the Landsat satellites, has released these infrared images showing the extent of the world's worst act of ecoterrorism.eco-ˈterrorist, one who participates in or supports eco-terrorism.1988Arena Autumn/Winter 35 He came up with the idea for Tourist Season, the story of *eco-terrorists taking on the grossness of the tourist trade.1993Coloradoan (Fort Collins) 16 Jan. a9/5 Hagar's group flooded the local media with ads deriding the wolf supporters as ‘eco-terrorists’ who are pouring into this frigid subarctic settlement from ‘the outside’.eco-warrior n. a person actively involved in protecting, or preventing damage to, the environment, esp. one involved in campaigning, protest activities, and direct action.1987Sunday Times 31 May 25/3 After it became clear that whalers had virtually wiped out the great whales, the ‘*eco-warriors’ of Greenpeace and other groups dramatised the plight of the warm-blooded intelligent creatures.1990Los Angeles Times (Nexis) 7 Jan. (Bk. Review section) 1 There is the ‘Code of the Eco-Warrior’, admonishing that proper actions result in no one getting hurt, no one getting caught, and ‘if you do get caught you're on your own’.1996C. J. Stone Fierce Dancing ix. 133 Andy was giving lessons in tree-climbing to all the wide-eyed trainee eco-warriors who looked upon these two as the epitome of anarchist revolutionaries.
eco-
word-forming element referring to the environment and man's relation to it, abstracted from ecology, ecological; attested from 1969.
eco-

household, environment, relating to ecology or economy:
ecology, economize, ecospheres, ecomanagement
eco- /ˈi:kəʊ, ˈɛkəʊ/ combining form.
ORIGIN: Extracted from ecology.
Of or pertaining to ecology, ecological; environmental.
 DERIVATIVE ecocaˈtastrophe noun (an occurrence of) major damage to the natural environment, esp. where caused by human activity M20.
ecoˈcentrism noun the view or belief that environmental concerns should take precedence over the needs and rights of human beings L20.
ecoˈcidal adjective designed or tending to damage the natural environment L20.
ecocide noun (esp. wilful) destruction of the natural environment M20.
ecoclimate noun the climate of a particular habitat M20.
eco-friendly adjective (colloq.) avoiding harm to the natural environment L20.
eco-geoˈgraphic, eco-geoˈgraphical adjectives pertaining to location and environment M20.
eco-label noun a label identifying manufactured products that satisfy certain conditions of environmental significance L20.
ecophene /-fi:n/ noun [phen(otyp)e] any of the range of phenotypes produced by one genotype in reaction to extremes of habitat E20.
ecophysiˈology noun the study of the interrelationship between the normal physical function of an organism and its environment M20.
eco-raider noun (US) a person who makes violent attacks in order to protect the natural environment L20.
ecoregion noun an area defined in terms of its natural features and environment M20.
ecosphere noun (a) the region of space (around the sun or a star) within which conditions compatible with the existence of life (esp. on planets) may theoretically occur; (b) = biosphere: M20.
ecosystem noun a system of organisms occupying a habitat, together with those aspects of the physical environment with which they interact M20.
ecotone noun [Greek tonos tension] a region of transition between two ecological communities E20.
Ecoˈtopia noun [after Utopia] an ecologically ideal region or form of society L20.
ecotype noun a subspecies occupying a particular habitat E20.
eco-warrior noun a person actively involved in protecting, or preventing damage to, the environment L20.
eco-
prefix. of the environment or ecology; ecological, as in ecosphere, ecosystem, ecocide.
[abstracted < ecology]
eco-
— see ec- II

eco-

  • enPR: ĕkŏ-
  • IPA: /ˈiːˌkəʊ/
  • Prefix

    1. ecology or the environment (in the ecological sense)
    2. economy

    Etymology

    From French eco-, from Latin oeco, from Ancient Greek οἶκος (oîkos, “house, household”).

    Usage notes

    Primarily used in ecology/environment sense; if used in “economy” sense, usually as part of economy or a derived term.

    Derived terms

    English words prefixed with eco-
  • eco-city
  • ecocommunalism
  • ecodefense
  • eco-friendly
  • ecology
  • ecoporn
  • ecopornography
  • ecosystem
  • eco-village/ecovillage
  • eco-town
  • eco-warrior
  • (Economics):

  • econometrics
  • econometry
  • economy
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