English

edit

Etymology

edit

From Latin -rrhagia, from Ancient Greek -ραγία (-ragía), from the stem of ῥήγνυμι (rhḗgnumi, to break, burst).

Suffix

edit

-rrhagia

  1. (medicine) Forms nouns indicating excessive discharge or haemorrhage from an organ.

Coordinate terms

edit

Derived terms

edit

Latin

edit
  A user has added this entry to requests for verification(+) with the reason: “haemorrhagia comes from Greek αἱμορραγία (haimorrhagía) [1]
If it cannot be verified that this term meets our attestation criteria, it will be deleted. Feel free to edit this entry as normal, but do not remove {{rfv}} until the request has been resolved.

Etymology

edit

From Ancient Greek -ραγία (-ragía), from the stem of ῥήγνυμι (rhḗgnumi, to break, burst).

Suffix

edit

-rrhagia f (genitive -rrhagiae); first declension

  1. Forms abstract nouns from adjectives and possibly other roots.
    haemo (blood)haemorrhagia (violent loss of blood)

Declension

edit

First-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative -rrhagia -rrhagiae
genitive -rrhagiae -rrhagiārum
dative -rrhagiae -rrhagiīs
accusative -rrhagiam -rrhagiās
ablative -rrhagiā -rrhagiīs
vocative -rrhagia -rrhagiae
  NODES
Note 1