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How to use etymological in a sentence

Looking for sentences and phrases with the word etymological? Here are some examples.

Sentence Examples
Written language often preserves etymological and morphological facts about the vocabulary that are lost in pronunciation.
There are many great etymological books out there that are not listed here.
Lots of the most interesting etymological claims that are bandied about on the internet and in the popular press are bunk.
In etymological terms, the word Maremma derives from the Latin mare, or sea, and is related to the French marais.
Here follows, etymological notes and a transfiguration into modern English.
Maley takes us through punning, naming, etymological wordplay, versification and other features of the poetic language.
For it, he drew on Renaissance technical terms, derivations, compounds, archaisms, polysemy, etymological meanings, and idioms.
Thus, at an etymological level, leaves and paper, and leaves and books are deeply connected.
We have no comprehensive dictionary, no etymological dictionary, no dictionaries of regionalisms, no modern thesaurus.
Anger, it should be noted, has etymological roots both in trouble, grief and affliction.
The word was formed by a rather circuitous route, according to the OED's etymological information.
From time to time, of course, name and music fuse, and you get a kind of etymological perfection that's somehow close to onomatopoeia.
The etymological meaning is weird, in that it has no connection with reality!
Caesura: Division of a word at the end of a line which obeys the very precise typographic and etymological rules of the language used.
Critique and crisis are both derived from the same etymological root, referring to categories of discernment, choice, decision and judgement.
The table below contains all of the 116 distinct bynames found in the poll tax data, together with etymological notes on as many of them as I can identify.
That is to say, what is the world agenda for the 21st century, in the etymological sense of agenda: things that absolutely have to be done?
In present-day usage, despite Fowler's strictures, concern for classical and linguistic purity is minimal and the coining of etymological hybrids is casual and massive.
If you take to the etymological key, the river name stands as the river of the brilliance of the sun.
We should investigate: if this really were a syndrome in the etymological sense of the word, then all those affected would show similar symptoms.
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Examples from Classical Literature
Their etymological origin is in any case the same as if they were nicknames.
Latimer, Latner sometimes means a worker in latten, a mixed metal of which the etymological origin is unknown.
Of all deductions, those drawn from etymological comparisons are, perhaps, the most fallacious.
On grounds equally slight with these have many attempts been made to form conclusions from etymological comparisons.
I and me, thou and ye, stand in no etymological relations to each other.
Etymologists used to study etymological equivalents in different languages ever before modern linguistics was born.
India had her etymological and her legendary school of mythology.
Generally, a DOM equals to a basic Chinese character, and is a Chinese etymological unit.
The term in the etymological sense would be applied to Gwen.
This is somewhat of a new departure in etymological dictionaries.
There is really no etymological connection between the two names.
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