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1. Etymology of the English word ab-

the English word ab-
derived from the Latin word ab (away; away from)
derived from the English word anormal
derived from the Medieval Latin word anormalus

Derivations in English

abnormal, abaxial, abirritant, abirritate, abjunction, abstriction

Derivations in other languages

Latin abomasum

Usage

Word found in Modern English

2. Etymology of the English word ab-

derived from the English word ab-
derived from the English word abstracted
derived from the English word absolute
derived from the Latin word absolutus (absolute; fluent; fully developed, complete)
derived from the Latin word absolvere (free , release; acquit)
derived from the Latin word solvere (loosen, release, unbind)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *leu-
using the Latin prefix ab- (away; wrongly, badly)
using the English prefix mac-
derived from the English word rearward
derived from the English word abstract
derived from the Medieval Latin word abstractus (abstract)
derived from the Latin word abstrahere (drag away from, remove forcibly, abort)
derived from the Classical Latin word trahere (to draw; draw, drag, haul)
using the Latin prefix ab- (away; wrongly, badly)
using the Latin prefix abs-
derived from the Latin word abs
using the English suffix -ed

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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