Combining forms are: ne/o - new, nat/o - birth, & log/o - word; the study of Suffix is: -ist - one who specializes in
partition
It simply means 'to divide in to two parts'
Yes, that's what it means.
poli/o/myel -itis
Bronch\o -rrhea
Bronchorrhea has got 4 syllables - bron·chor·rhe·a. Bronchorrhea is also a compound word made up of : 1. broncho- a combining form representing bronchus, or bronchia, in compound words 2. -rrea a combining form meaning "flow," "discharge," used in the formation of compound words
cyst/o urethr/o -graphy
electr/o, my/o, -graphy
Anti and neoplastic Anti referring to the negative, neoplastic referring to cancer
valv/o/plast/y - valv/o (valve) + plast (surgical repair) + y (noun suffix)
The component parts of a word are prefixes, suffixes, and roots. Prefixes are added at the beginning of a word, suffixes at the end, and roots are the core meaning of the word.
Combining forms are: ne/o - new, nat/o - birth, & log/o - word; the study of Suffix is: -ist - one who specializes in
The term "endarterial" can be divided into its component word parts as follows: "end-" is a prefix meaning "within" or "inside." "arteri-" is the root word, referring to arteries. "-al" is a suffix that denotes "pertaining to." Therefore, "endarterial" can be broken down into "end-" (within) + "arteri-" (arteries) + "-al" (pertaining to), meaning pertaining to the inside of arteries.
The component word parts of "etiology" are "eti-" meaning cause and "-ology" meaning study of. Together, they form the word that refers to the study of the causes or origins of diseases.
the term for pregnancy is gravidity... so we can say some one is gravid in medical term
a- plast -ic