单词 | tecno- |
释义 | tecno-comb. form used in English in a few rare technical words. tecnoctonia n. Brit. /ˌtɛknɒkˈtəʊnɪə/ , U.S. /ˌtɛknɑkˈtoʊniə/ child-murder, infanticide. [ < Hellenistic Greek τεκνοκτονία < ancient Greek τεκνόκτονος that murders children ( < τεκνο- tecno- comb. form + -κτόνος slaying: see myoctonic adj.) + -ία -ia suffix1. Compare post-classical Latin tecnoctonia (1664 or earlier).] ΘΚΠ the world > life > death > killing > killing of type of person > [noun] > of infants infanticide1656 child murder1729 tecnoctonia1842 neonaticide1969 1842 R. Dunglison Med. Lexicon (ed. 3) Tecnoctonia, infanticide. tecnogonia n. Brit. /ˌtɛknə(ʊ)ˈɡəʊnɪə/ , U.S. /ˌtɛknəˈɡoʊniə/ †(a) the age of a father at his eldest child's birth; (b) child-bearing, pregnancy. [ < ancient Greek τεκνογονία child-bearing < τεκνόγονος that bears children ( < τεκνο- tecno- comb. form + -γονος producing: see protogonous adj.) + -ία -ia suffix1. Compare post-classical Latin tecnogonia (1578 or earlier).] ΘΚΠ the world > life > source or principle of life > age > [noun] > specific age yearOE scorea1400 seventeena1568 threescorea1616 jubileea1640 military age1656 legal age1658 tecnogoniaa1676 sixty1717 forty1732 fifty1738 seven-year-old1762 teen1789 septuagenarianism1824 sexagenarianism1824 day-old1831 seventeen-year-old1858 centenarianism1863 roaring forties1867 twenties1874 leaving age1875 school-leaving age1881 octogenarianism1883 reading age1906 three1909 teenage1912 eleven-plus1937 the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > pregnancy or gestation > [noun] pregnation?a1425 gravidation1450 pregnancyc1487 conceytatea1500 greatnessa1500 tympany1580 childbearing1612 gestation1615 ingravidation1615 gravidity1651 pregnantness1727 utero-gestation1775 baby-making1827 situation1829 enceinteship1841 tecnogonia1860 infanticipation1934 a1676 M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind (1677) 178 Partly by adding 100 Years to that Technogonia of the Patriarchs before Abraham, have made the Period larger by 884 Years. 1860 R. G. Mayne Expos. Lexicon Med. Sci. Tecnogonia. tecnolater n. Brit. /tɛkˈnɒlətə/ , U.S. /tɛkˈnɑlədər/ (also teknolater) one who worships or idolizes children.ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > loved one > [noun] > worship or idolization of children > one who worships or idolizes children tecnolater1914 1914 A. H. Sidgwick Promenade Ticket 30 ‘Those who are called so [sc. happy]’ (i.e. by Froebel, Wordsworth, and teknolaters generally) ‘are simply congratulated on account of their promise.’ tecnolatry n. Brit. /tɛkˈnɒlətri/ , U.S. /tɛkˈnɑlətri/ [-latry comb. form] ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > love > loved one > [noun] > worship or idolization of children tecnolatry1899 1899 M. Beerbohm More 174 A perfect example of our tecnolatry, our delight in the undirected oddities of children. tecnology n. Brit. /tɛkˈnɒlədʒi/ , U.S. /tɛkˈnɑlədʒi/ the scientific study of children; pædology. [-logy comb. form] ΘΚΠ the world > people > science of mankind > [noun] > anthropology > child study tecnology1857 paedology1870 child study1886 1857 R. Dunglison Med. Lexicon (rev. ed.) 901/2 Tecnology.., a treatise on children. 1899 New Sydenham Soc. Lexicon Tecnology, the study or scientific knowledge of childhood. tecnonymy n. Brit. /tɛkˈnɒnᵻmi/ , U.S. /tɛkˈnɑnəmi/ (also teknonymy) the practice among certain peoples of naming a parent from his or her child. [-onymy comb. form] ΘΚΠ the mind > language > naming > name or appellation > [noun] > name derived from a child > practice of using paedonymy1883 tecnonymy1888 1888 E. B. Tylor in Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. (1889) Feb. 248 Another custom..is the practice of naming the parent from the child... There are above thirty peoples spread over the earth who thus name the father, and, though less often, the mother. They may be called, coining a name for them, teknonymous peoples. When beginning to notice the wide distribution of this custom of teknonymy [etc.]. 1888 Athenæum 1 Dec. 740/1 Another custom, here called teknonymy [by Dr. E. B. Tylor]..; as an example was mentioned the name of Ra-Mary, or Father of Mary, by which Moffat was generally known in Africa. 1937 R. H. Lowie Hist. Ethnol. Theory vii. 81 Teknonymy is no longer the inevitable effect of matrilocal residence or of an avoidance rule. 1951 R. Firth Elements Social Organization i. 9 A child does not take its name from its parents; on the contrary, in the institution of teknonymy they are known as ‘Father and Mother of So-and-so’. tecnonymous adj. Brit. /tɛkˈnɒnᵻməs/ , U.S. /tɛkˈnɑnəməs/ practising tecnonymy.ΘΚΠ the mind > language > naming > name or appellation > [adjective] > relating to a surname > matronymic matronymic1874 tecnonymous1888 metronymic1896 1888 E. B. Tylor in Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. (1889) Feb. 248 Another custom..is the practice of naming the parent from the child... There are above thirty peoples spread over the earth who thus name the father, and, though less often, the mother. They may be called, coining a name for them, teknonymous peoples. When beginning to notice the wide distribution of this custom of teknonymy [etc.]. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1911; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < comb. forma1676 |
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