Manitize mah-nee tahyz - etymological word composition
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (â-ise, -izeâ), from Old French -iser (â-izeâ), from Latin -izÄre (â-izeâ), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-Ãzein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -ð¹ðð¾ð°ð½ (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
- I will seek to manitize the system that prevents education inequality.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.
Manitize mah-nee tahyz - etymological word composition
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (â-ise, -izeâ), from Old French -iser (â-izeâ), from Latin -izÄre (â-izeâ), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-Ãzein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -ð¹ðð¾ð°ð½ (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
- I will seek to manitize the system that prevents education inequality.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.