← Back to context Comment by fragmede 13 hours ago Synthetipologist vs Synthropologist tho. 4 comments fragmede Reply xerox13ster 12 hours ago Anthropo- is the entire prefix as it relates to human kind. The -thro- does not carry a meaning on its own that can be carried to another word. ninjagoo 13 hours ago > SynthropologistHave an upvote :)*thropologist: study of beings xerox13ster 12 hours ago That's not how the Greek word stems work. Technically it would not be synthetipologist, it would more accurately just be Synthetologist, as the Greek podes suffix means having feet. ninjagoo 12 hours ago > That's not how the Greek word stems work.Sir, I would have you know that we are discussing English terms, not GreekAInthropologist works fine for me, and is a lot funnierLoL
xerox13ster 12 hours ago Anthropo- is the entire prefix as it relates to human kind. The -thro- does not carry a meaning on its own that can be carried to another word.
ninjagoo 13 hours ago > SynthropologistHave an upvote :)*thropologist: study of beings xerox13ster 12 hours ago That's not how the Greek word stems work. Technically it would not be synthetipologist, it would more accurately just be Synthetologist, as the Greek podes suffix means having feet. ninjagoo 12 hours ago > That's not how the Greek word stems work.Sir, I would have you know that we are discussing English terms, not GreekAInthropologist works fine for me, and is a lot funnierLoL
xerox13ster 12 hours ago That's not how the Greek word stems work. Technically it would not be synthetipologist, it would more accurately just be Synthetologist, as the Greek podes suffix means having feet. ninjagoo 12 hours ago > That's not how the Greek word stems work.Sir, I would have you know that we are discussing English terms, not GreekAInthropologist works fine for me, and is a lot funnierLoL
ninjagoo 12 hours ago > That's not how the Greek word stems work.Sir, I would have you know that we are discussing English terms, not GreekAInthropologist works fine for me, and is a lot funnierLoL
Anthropo- is the entire prefix as it relates to human kind. The -thro- does not carry a meaning on its own that can be carried to another word.
> Synthropologist
Have an upvote :)
*thropologist: study of beings
That's not how the Greek word stems work. Technically it would not be synthetipologist, it would more accurately just be Synthetologist, as the Greek podes suffix means having feet.
> That's not how the Greek word stems work.
Sir, I would have you know that we are discussing English terms, not Greek
AInthropologist works fine for me, and is a lot funnier
LoL