Click on the elements of interest for more details,
or make a new query .
The numbers that are shown in the parentheses indicate how
many of your word queries appear in each category.
- tessara-, tessera- (four; cube) dictionary words: tessara to tesseratomy, part 1 of 1 (three matching results)
- malleo-, malle- (Latin: hammer) (two matching results)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words (two matching results)
- gamo-, gam- (marriage, union; wedding) words: adelphogamy to geitonogamy, part 1 of 2 (two matching results)
- tri-(three, thrice, threefold) dictionary words: triact to tricycle, part 1 of 4 (two matching results)
- rami-, ram- (Latin: branch) (two matching results)
- aeluro-, aelur-, ailuro-, ailouro-, ailur-, eluro- (Greek: cat) (two matching results)
- perineo- (Greek: space between the scrotum or mons veneris and the anus) (one matching result)
- costo-, cost-, costi- (Latin: rib, ribs; side; coast) (one matching result)
- Chemical Elements words: indium to mendelevium, part 4 of 8 (one matching result)
- sauro-, -saurian (lizard, serpent) words: Dinosaurs Naashoiobitosaurus to Piatnitzkysaurus [plus one pix], part 7 of 10 (one matching result)
- agora-, -gor- (Greek: assembly, market place; open space, public speaking; originally, "to unite") (one matching result)
- -arch, -archy (govern, rule; ruler) words: anarch to kritarchy, part 1 of 2 (one matching result)
- agape- (Greek > Latin: love feast of the early Christians; love, love feast; to love) (one matching result)
- legi-,-lectic (read, recite) words: collect to sortilege (one matching result)
- ileo-, ile- (Greek > Latin: ile, ileum, or ilium [singular], ilia [plural], groin, flank, lower part of the body, gut, bowels, abdomen, loins; from Greek eileos, verbal of eilein, to roll or twist up tightly; used earlier interchangeably with ilium, but later referred to the entire intestine], last division of the small intestine) (one matching result)
- phalango-, phalang- (Greek via Latin: bone between two joints of a finger or toe; line of battle; from phalanx, heavy infantry in close order [from Greek antiquity]) (one matching result)
- -arian (Latin: a suffix; a person who, a thing that; a person who is a part of something, pertaining to one s state or condition) (one matching result)
- Plankton words: phytoplankton to zooplankton, part 2 of 2 (one matching result)
- tri-(three, thrice, threefold) dictionary words: trinal to trisyllable, part 3 of 4 (one matching result)
- tri-(three, thrice, threefold) dictionary words: tritagonist to trixenous, part 4 of 4 (one matching result)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words: bioaccumulation to biochrome, part 3 of 20 (one matching result)
- sphinctero-, sphincter- (Greek > Latin: that which binds tightly, press together; band, lace; hence, muscle that closes an aperture of the body; a ringlike band of muscle fibers that constricts a passage or closes a natural orifice) (one matching result)
- terato-, terata-, terat-, tera- (Greek > Latin: marvel, omen, monster; malformation) (one matching result)
- long-, longi- (Latin: long) (one matching result)
- distric- (Latin: political or geographical division) (one matching result)
- gemin- (Latin: twin; double) (one matching result)
- laparo-, lapar- (Greek: the soft part of the body between the ribs and the hip, flank, loin; denotes the flank or loins and the abdominal wall) (one matching result)
- pygo-, pyg-, -pyga, -pygia (Greek: rump, buttocks, bottom; rear end; butt; the posterior part of the body) (one matching result)
- port-, portat- (carry, bring, bear) words: apport-transportation (one matching result)
- poly- (many, much; excessive) words: polyacanthous to polylogy, part 1 of 2 (one matching result)
- Chemical Elements words: scandium to thorium, part 7 of 8 (one matching result)
- ophio-, ophi-, -ophid, ophidio-, -ophidia, -ophis (Greek: snake, serpent) (one matching result)
- achillo-, achill-, Achilles (Greek > Latin: tendon at the back of the heel) (one matching result)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words: biolite to biolytic, part 8 of 20 (one matching result)
- sex (Latin: sexus; originally it meant "division" and is related to secare, "to cut" Don t confuse this "sex" element with another one that means "six") (one matching result)
- agra- (Greek > Latin: pertaining to land or fields) (one matching result)