| psepho-, pseph- (Greek > Latin: pebble/pebbles, stone/stones; election; vote).To cast one's vote with a pebble, to count, reckon; from small stone, pebble [used in counting or voting]. Pebbles were used in ancient Greece for casting votes, and so psephos came to metaphorically mean, "vote". isopsephic, isopsephism: Of equal numerical value; said of words in which the numerical values of the letters (according to the ancient Greek notation) made up the same amount; from iso-, equal + psephos, pebble, counter.
 psephism: A decree enacted by a vote of a public assembly, especially of the Athenians.
 psephite, psephitic: A conglomerate composed of pebbles or small rounded stones.
 psephocrat: An elected ruler, or an adherent or supporter of government by election.
 psephocracy: The form of government that results from an election by ballot; representative government.
 psephograph: A machine for the automatic recording of votes.
 psephologist, psephological, psephologically: A political scientist who specializes in the study of elections; an electoral analyst or commentator.
 psephology: 1. The study of voting patterns.  2. The study of public elections, and statistical analysis of trends in voting; loosely, the prediction of electoral results. psephomancy: Divination by pebble-stones, distinguished by certain characters, and put as lots into a vessel; which, having made certain supplications to the gods to direct them, they drew out, and according to the characters, conjectured what should happen to them.
 psephomantist: One who uses stones-pebbles to divine the future.
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