| -machy, -machia, -machist, -machic, -machical (Greek: a suffix; battle, war, contest, fight).alectoromachy: alectryomachy: andromachy: angelmachy: batrachoherpetomachia: batrachomyomachia: A storm in a puddle, much ado about nothing; literally, the battle of the frogs and mice.
 centauromachia: cynarctomachy: cytomachia: duomachy: gamomachia: gamomachy: gigantomachia: gigantomachy: heresimachy, heresimach, heresimachia: Active opposition to heresy and heretics.
 hieromachia: hieromachy: hippomachia: hippomachy: iconomachy: logomachy, logomachia: 1. A dispute over or about words.  2. A controversy marked by verbiage. machozoid: naumachy: psychomachia: psychomachy: pyromachy: sciamachy: skiamachy: tauromachia: tauromachian: tauromachy: telemachy: theomachist: theomachy: Titanomachy: trimachia: A general must be skillful in preparing the materials of war and in supplying his soldiers; he must be a man of mechanical ingenuity, careful, persevering, sagacious, kind and yet severe, open yet crafty, careful of his own but ready to steal from others, profuse yet rapacious, cautious yet enterprising. -Xenophon, ancient Greek historian and military leader
 -North Vietnamese General Vo Nguyen Giap
 "Giap: The Victor in Vietnam" by Peter Macdonald-Brian (Newsday, 1993). |