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.
- Cyber (helmsman, governor) words: biocybernetics to cyborg (five matching results)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words (three matching results)
- techno-, -techny (art, skill, craft): agrotechnology to zymotechnology (three matching results)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words: bionic to biophylaxis, part 11 of 20 (two matching results)
- osmo-, osmia-, osmi-, osm-, -osmia, -osmatic (Greek: odor; smell, smelling) (two matching results)
- Chemical Elements words: erbium to hydrogen, part 3 of 8 (two matching results)
- acous-, -acoustical words: acouasm to acoutometer, part 1 of 2 (one matching result)
- Chemical Elements: cadmium to einsteinium, part 2 of 8 (one matching result)
- tera- [TE ruh] (Greek: "monster, marvel"; a decimal prefix used in the international metric system for measurements) (one matching result)
- lustr-, lust- (Latin: light up, shine) (one matching result)
- gram- (write, written) words: grammar to nephrogram, part 2 of 3 (one matching result)
- phono-, -phonia (sound, voice, speech) words: earphone to neurophonia, part 2 of 5 (one matching result)
- bio-, bi- (life; living, live, alive) words: bioecologist to biofraud, part 5 of 20 (one matching result)
- phono-, -phonia (sound, voice, speech) words: pneumatophony to xylophonist, part 5 of 5 (one matching result)
- Chemical Elements words: scandium to thorium, part 7 of 8 (one matching result)
- -ic (Greek: a suffix; pertaining to; of the nature of, like; in chemistry, it denotes a higher valence of the element than is expressed by -ous) (one matching result)
- Chemical Elements words: thulium to zirconium, part 8 of 8 (one matching result)
- -tron, -tronic (Greek: a suffix; device, instrument; more generally, used in the names of any kind of chamber or apparatus used in experiments) (one matching result)
- electro-, electr-, electri- (Latin: electric, electricity [amber, resembling amber], generated from amber which when rubbed vigorously [as by friction], produced the effect of static electricity, as described by Dr William Gilbert [1540-1603] in a treatise on the magnet in 1600) (one matching result)