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18 cze 2023 · ἄτομον (átomon) Descendants. [edit] English: atom. → Norwegian Bokmål: atom. From neuter ἄτομον (átomon) Greek: άτομο (átomo) Further reading. [edit] “ ἄτομος ”, in Liddell & Scott (1940) A Greek–English Lexicon, Oxford: Clarendon Press. “ ἄτομος ”, in Liddell & Scott (1889) An Intermediate Greek–English Lexicon, New York: Harper & Brothers.
Transliteration: atomos Phonetic Spelling: (at'-om-os) Definition: uncut, indivisible, (an indivisible) moment (of time) Usage: (lit: that cannot be cut), an indivisible part of time, a moment.
25 wrz 2024 · The word “atomos” originates from the greek language, specifically from the noun “átomos” (ἄτομος). In greek, “átomos” is derived from the verb “atemnó” (ἀτέμνω), which means “to cut” or “to divide.”. The prefix “a-” in “átomos” signifies negation or absence, while “tomos” means “a cutting ...
23 sie 2005 · Since the Greek adjective atomos means, literally, ‘uncuttable,’ the history of ancient atomism is not only the history of a theory about the nature of matter, but also the history of the idea that there are indivisible parts in any kind of magnitude—geometrical extension, time, etc.
ἄτομος (Ancient Greek) Origin & history From ἀ-("not") τομ-, o-grade of the root of τέμνω ("to cut"). Adjective. uncut; indivisible, not capable of being cut/divided into smaller pieces; undivided, individual
Strong's Number G823 matches the Greek ἄτομος (atomos), which occurs 1 times in 1 verses in the TR Greek.
"indivisible particle," from Greek atomos "uncut, unhewn; indivisible," from a- "not"… See origin and meaning of atom.