English word dysarthria comes from English egg, Ancient Greek ἔταλον, Proto-Indo-European *h₁en, Proto-Indo-European - -teros, English dys- (Bad.), English -ia, English arthr-, Latin mamma
Dictionary entry | Language | Definition |
---|---|---|
egg | English (en) | (NZ, pejorative) A foolish or obnoxious person.. (biology, countable) The female primary cell, the ovum.. (countable, uncountable) The egg of a domestic fowl (especially a hen) or its contents, used as food.. (informal) A person, fellow.. (mildly, pejorative, slang, ethnic slur) , (potentially offensive) A person of Caucasian (Western) ancestry, who has a strong desire to learn about and [...] |
ἔταλον | Ancient Greek (grc) | |
*h₁en | Proto-Indo-European (ine) | in |
- -teros | Proto-Indo-European (ine) | |
dys- | English (en) | Bad. |
-ia | English (en) | Used in forming plurals of nouns in -ium and -ion. Used in forming names of countries, diseases, flowers, and rarely collections of things (such as militaria, deletia). |
arthr- | English (en) | |
mamma | Latin (lat) | (anatomy) a breast. (anatomy) an udder; a pap. (anatomy, of animals) a teat, a dug. (family) mama (a childish name for a mother in the language of children). (transferred meaning) a protuberance on tree bark. |
egg yolk | English (en) | The yellow central part of a chicken’s (or other bird’s) egg. |
*ut- | Proto-Indo-European (ine) | |
vitulus | Latin (lat) | A bull calf. |
*h₁énteros | Proto-Indo-European (ine) | Inside, within. |
*énteros | Proto-Hellenic (grk-pro) | |
ἔντερον | Ancient Greek (grc) | |
vitellus | Latin (lat) | A small calf. The yolk of an egg. |
Sauropoda | English (en) | |
dysarthria | English (en) | Difficulty in articulating words due to disturbance in the form or function of the structures that modulate voice into speech. One of the first indicative symptoms of myasthenia gravis brought about by an auto-immune response to acetylcholine receptors. |