palingenesis
Reikšmė (Anglų k.)
- (also, figuratively, uncountable) Rebirth; regeneration; (countable) an instance of this.
- (also, countable, figuratively, uncountable) Rebirth; regeneration; (countable) an instance of this.
- (also, countable, figuratively, historical, uncountable) Rebirth; regeneration; (countable) an instance of this.
- (historical, obsolete, uncountable) The apparent repetition, during the development of a single embryo, of changes that occurred previously in the evolution of its species.
- (uncountable) The regeneration of magma by the melting of metamorphic rocks.
Priešingybė
caenogenesis
Sinonimai
Vertimai
Tariamas kaip (IPA)
/ˌpælɪnˈd͡ʒɛnɪsɪs/
Etimologija (Anglų k.)
Probably a variant of palingenesia + -genesis (suffix meaning ‘origin; production’). Palingenesia is a learned borrowing from Late Latin palingenesia (“rebirth; regeneration”), from Koine Greek παλιγγενεσία (palingenesía, “rebirth”), from Ancient Greek πᾰ́λῐν (pắlĭn, “again, anew, once more”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kʷel- (“to turn (end-over-end); to revolve around; to dwell, sojourn”)) + γένεσις (génesis, “creation; manner of birth; origin, source”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵenh₁- (“to beget; to give birth; to produce”)) + -ῐ́ᾱ (-ĭ́ā, suffix forming feminine abstract nouns). By surface analysis, palin- + genesis. Sense 2 (“apparent repetition, during the development of a single embryo, of changes that occurred previously in the evolution of its species”) is from German Palingenesis; while sense 3 (“regeneration of magma by the melting of metamorphic rocks”) is from Swedish palingenes. Both are derived from the Greek word: see above. The plural form is probably from palingenesis + Latin genesēs (a plural form of genesis).
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