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Etymologically, the name appears to be derived from two possible words.
Such etymologically disparate mixing is considered by some to be bad form.
This is the meaning that physics, the study of nature (etymologically), takes.
Night-mare has of course nothing to do with the horse, etymologically.
The word is etymologically derived from Greek for "without" and "country".
Etymologically, the name may refer to the place where the rivers or currents meet.
Etymologically it implies a breaking of something that has become hardened.
However, these are etymologically unsound and of much later origin than the name itself.
Etymologically, the name of the village is derived from the streams that run through it.
The term "assumption" is actually broader than its standard use, etymologically speaking.
Many names that are etymologically related to Maria are also used.
Parrots are human to begin with; etymologically, that is.
While etymologically similar to a mile, the definition shares origin with a that of a league.
As such, the term is etymologically related very closely with philosophical egoism.
Etymologically, it is an adjective meaning "of or pertaining to the people, popular".
The name is etymologically related to Allah, used by Muslims.
Note that the words should be etymologically distinct, so refuse, minute, contract do not qualify.
Etymologically, it appears to be a topographical name meaning "someone living by a bend in a road".
Dario is a masculine given name, etymologically related to Darius.
Standard Korean spelling treat them as opaque, but here it is broken down etymologically.
Etymologically, ius has some relation to right, just or straight.
In the course of it, he points out that the word jealous is etymologically related to the word zeal.
In fact, etymologically Galatea can be translated to mean "milk-white."
This name is however etymologically unrelated to Brendan.
This means that the dictionary user need not know that the two are etymologically identical.