ptero-
combining form
wing, feather, or a part resembling a wing
⇒
pterodactyl
Origin
from Greek pteron wing, featherptero-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “wing,” “feather,” used in the formation of compound words:
pterodactyl.
Also, pter-.
Origin
< New Latin, combining form representing Greek pterón
Related Words
- pter-
- pterocarpous
- pteropod
- pterosaur
ptero-a word element meaning 'wing', as in pterodactyl.
[Greek, combining form of pteron]ptero-
combining form
- relating to wings; having wings表示“(有)翼”, “(有)翅”, “(有)羽”:
-
pterosaur.
词源
from Greek pteron 'feather,wing'.
1949 New Biol. VI. 118The construction of the tubes in which both Graptolites and *Pterobranchs live gives good reason for accepting Kozlowski's thesis.
1962 D. Nichols Echinoderms xiv. 175Grobben has shown the principal transformations necessary to convert a pterobranch hemichordate into an echinoderm.
1968 A. S. Romer Procession of Life vii. 141The pterobranchs are tiny animals, only a fraction of an inch in size, living in colonial fashion within branching tubes, with, superficially, the appearance of tiny stemmed flowers.
1978 Nature 23 Nov. 318/3 Examples of arborescent growth occur among sponges, hydroids, graptolites, pterobranchs.
1885 E. R. Lankester in Encycl. Brit. XIX. 436/1A serious error has been made in comparing the contractile stalk of the *Pterobranchiate polypide to the ‘funiculus’ or cord-like mesentery of Eupolyzoa.
1858 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,Pterobranchius, applied by Blainville to an Order..of the..Pteropoda, having the branchiæ in form of wings or fins: *pterobranchious.
1870 Rolleston Anim. Life 103A small ossicle, the ‘*pterocardiac’, articulates with either outer angle of the cardiac.
1877 Huxley Anat. Inv. Anim. vi. 319A small curved triangular antero-lateral or pterocardiac ossicle.
1866 Livingstone LastJrnls. (1873) I. ii. 48One tree of which bark cloth is made, *pterocarpus, is abundant.
1887 Sollas in Encycl. Brit. XXII. 417/2A common form of anchorate, the *pterocymba, results.
1887 Amer. Naturalist XXI. 585Particular styles of imbrication of the cubital coverts with certain structural peculiarities—osteological, myological, visceral, and *pterographical.
1896 Chester Dict. Min. ,*Pterolite..an altered lepidomelane, found in fan-shaped or feather-shaped aggregations.
1907 Nature 12 Dec. 142/2 The species are to be called Oribata bostocki, distinguished by the *pteromorphæ being attached to the anterior margin of the abdomen instead of its lateral margin. [ of mites]
1952 Baker & Wharton Introd. Acarology viii. 387Within the Aptyctima we find several natural groups based on..the possession or lack of pteromorphs or wings.
1959 T. E. Hughes Mites viii. 113When big pteromorphae are present, they can usually be depressed by special muscles.
1962 New Scientist 20 Sept. 628/2 One group of mites is unique in possessing hinged outgrowths similar to wings, called pteromorphs.
1972 L. Gozmány tr. Balogh's Oribatid Genera of World 22The pteromorpha is a horizontal or inferiorly deflected chitinous lamella.
1885 Standard Nat. Hist. IV. 3A few birds remain so long within the egg that the feathers are developed when the shell bursts,..these might be called *Pteropædes.
1826 Kirby & Sp. Entomol. III. xxxiii. 372*Pteropega (the Wing-socket), the space in which the organs for flight are planted.
1858 Mayne Expos. Lex. , Pteropega,Entomol., applied by Kirby to the portion of the mesothorax and metathorax to which the superior and inferior wings are attached: *pteropegous.
1884 C. R. Osten-Sacken in Trans. Entomol. Soc. 503*Pteropleura, situated under the insertion of the wing, and behind the mesopleural structure.
1951 Colyer & Hammond FliesBrit. Isles 24The wings arise from the pteropleuron.
1977 Richards & Davies Imms'sGen. Textbk. Entomol. (ed. 10) II. iii. 961The pteropleuron ( = dorsal part of mesepimeron) lies below the root of the wing.
1861 H. Hagen Synops. Neuropt. N.Amer. 9*Pterostigma triangular.
Ibid. ,Wings with obscure black veins, *pterostigmal spot absent.
Ibid. 149Two angulose bands, the one nodal, the other *pterostigmatical.
1886 Proc. BostonSoc. Nat. Hist. 265The wider venation and..the brown pterostigma without darker nebula separate this species from all related ones.
Ibid. 288Wings pale, yellow in the pterostigmatical part.
1826 Kirby & Sp. Entomol. III. xxxi. 250The breast (pectus)..from which proceed the wing-cases (*Ptero-theca) and leg-cases (Podo-theca).
ptero-
before vowels pter-, word-forming element in science meaning "feather; wing," from comb. form of Greek pteron "wing," from PIE *pt-ero- (cognates: Sanskrit patram "wing, feather," Old Church Slavonic pero "pen," Old Norse fjöðr, Old English feðer), from root *pet- "to rush; to fly" (see petition, n.)
ORIGIN: from Greek pteron wing, feather: see -o- .
ptero-
— see pter-
— see pter-
ptero-
Prefix
- pertaining to wing or feather
Etymology
From Ancient Greek πτερόν (pterón, “wing, feather”)