Pan-, Panto- Words: panimmunity to panzootic,
Part 2 of 2
Words that include: pan-, panto-, pant-
(Greek: all, every, entire).
panimmunity: 
A general immunity to infectious diseases.
panleukopenia: 
A highly contagious and often fatal disease of cats, caused by a parvovirius; characteristics include leukopenia, inactivity, anorexia, diarrhea, and vomiting. Also called feline or infectious feline agranulocytosis, cat or feline enteritis, cat or feline distemper, and cat plague.
panmyelopathy: 
A proliferative disorder involving all elements of the bone marrow. Also called panmyelopathia.
panophobia, panphobia, pantophobia: 
1. A morbid groundless fear of some unknown evil or of everything in general; general apprehension. 
2. A pathological morbid fear or dread of everything.
panophthalmitis: 
Inflammation of the entire eyeball. Also called panophthalmia.
panoply: 
1. Originally, a complete suit of armor, the "whole armor" of a soldier of ancient or of medieval times. 
2. Any kind of complete defence, covering, or clothing.
3. Any splendid enveloping or surrounding array, material, or ideal. 
panoptic: 
Making every part visible.
panorama: 
1.  A picture of a landscape or other scene, either arranged on the inside of a cylindrical surface around the spectator as a center (a cyclorama), or unrolled or unfolded and made to pass before him, so as to show the various parts in succession.
2. A continuous passing scene; a mental vision in which a series of images passes before the mind's eye.
3. A complete and comprehensive survey or presentation of a subject.
panosteitis, panostitis: 
Inflammation of every part of a bone.
panotitis: 
Inflammation involving both the middle and internal ear.
panpharmacon: 
A remedy against all diseases and poisons, a universal remedy, a panacea.
panplegia: 
Paralysis of the entire body.
pansclerosis: 
Hardening of an entire organ.
pansinusitis, pansinusitis: 
Inflammation of all the paranasal sinuses on one or, rarely, both sides of the head.
pansophist: 
A person who claims to have universal knowledge.
pansophy: 
1. Universal or cyclopedic knowledge; a scheme or cyclop
dic work embracing the whole body of human knowledge.
2. The claim or pretension to universal knowledge.pantachromatic: 
A reference to a lens that exhibits a complete lack of chromatic aberration.
pantagamy, pantogamy: 
1. Marriage to all; the doctrine that every man is married to every woman, and vice versa.
2. A communistic system of complex marriage, in which all the men and women of a household or community are regarded as married to each other.
pantalgia: 
Pain that affects the entire body.
pantamorphia, pantamorphic: 
The complete absence of the usual form or shape
Panthalassa: 
A universal sea or single ocean, such as would have surrounded Pangea.
pantheism, pantheistic: 
1. The religious belief or philosophical theory that God and the universe are identical (implying a denial of the personality and transcendence of God); the doctrine that God is everything and everything is God.
2. The heathen worship of all the gods.
pantheon: 
1. A temple or sacred building dedicated to all the gods, or where images or other memorials of all the deities of a nation are collected; specifically, (with capital initial) that at Rome which was originally built by Agrippa c 25 B.C., and being on a circular plan has also been called the Rotunda; since a.d. 609 it has served as a Christian church, being known as Santa Maria Rotonda.
2. A building resembling or compared to the Pantheon at Rome; now, especially, a building serving to honor the illustrious dead of a nation, who are either buried there or have memorials erected to them in it.
3. The supposed habitation of all the gods; the assemblage of all the gods; the deities of a people collectively.
pantisocracy: 
A form of social organization in which all are equal in rank and social position; a Utopian community in which all are equal and all rule.
pantology: 
A survey or systematic view of all branches of knowledge; universal knowledge; also, a compendium of universal information.
pantomancer: 
A person who sees omens in all events or a lesson lurking in very experience.
pantomime: 
1. A Roman actor, who performed in a non-speaking show, representing by mimicry various characters and scenes; hence, generally, a mimic actor; one who represents his meaning by gestures and actions without words; a pantomimist.
2. Communication by means of gestures and facial expressions.
3. The telling of a story without words, by means of bodily movements, gestures, and facial expressions.
pantomorphia, pantomorphic: 
Assuming any or all forms or shapes.
pantophagy, pantophagous: 
The consumption of, or eating, all kinds of food.
pantoscopic: 
Having a wide range of visual perspectives.
pantothermia: 
A total state of fluctuating body temperature for which no explanation is appparent.
pantropic, pantotropic: 
having an affinity for all tissues; said especially of certain viruses.
panurgy: 
Doing all kinds of work; "ready to do anything".
panzootic, panepizootic: 
Any animal disease that is widespread.