- The term
derives from the Gr****
words prósopon (transl. face, person) and
poiéin (transl. to make, to do).
Prosopopoeiae are used
mostly to give another...
- ˌhiːmətoʊ-, ˌhɛmə-/; from
Ancient Gr**** αἷμα (haîma) 'blood' and ποιεῖν (
poieîn) 'to make'; also
hematopoiesis in
American English,
sometimes h(a)emopoiesis)...
- something, it will
become a plant. Potentially,
beings can
either 'act' (
poiein) or 'be
acted upon' (paschein),
which can be
either innate or learned. For...
-
practice ḥesed
among themselves (Gospel of Luke 10:37,
using Septuagintal poiein eleos meta from
Hebrew asah ḥesed ʿim). the Ashke**** Hasidim, an ascetic...
-
called a
habitus (from
Latin habere, to have).
Doing or
action (ποιεῖν,
poiein, to make or do). The
production of
change in some
other object (or in the...
-
making of
words = onomato- (combining form of ónoma name) + poi- (stem of
poieîn to make; see poet) + -ia -ia"Onomatopoeia". onomatopoeia, n.
Oxford English...
- (Attic πηλός pelós mud, silt) (proverbial
phrase mê dein ton
Oinea Pêlea
poiein, don't make wine into lees, Ath.9.383c, cf. Demetr.Eloc.171) ῥηχίη rhêchíê...
- with a thesis,
directed by
Antonio Valdecantos [es],
entitled Ti chre
poiein,
pensamiento y acción en Sophocles,
which would give rise to her book El...
- Logoi. The
American Journal of Philology121(1): 24. ton hēttō
logon kreittō
poiein Mattey, G.J. "Protagoras on Truth".
Retrieved 22
October 2013. Bostock,...
- pogonophobia, pogonotrophy,
Triplopogon poie-, poe- make Gr**** ποιϝέω, ποιεῖν (
poieîn), ποιητός (poiētós) "made", ποιητικός (poiētikós), ποίησις (poíēsis), ποίημα...