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lacto-
- a combining form meaning “milk,” used in the formation of compound words ( lactometer ); specialized in chemical terminology to mean “lactate,” or “lactic acid.”
lacto-
combining_form
- indicating milk
lactobacillus
Word History and Origins
Origin of lacto-1
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Words That Use lacto-
does lacto- mean?
Lacto- is a combining form used like a prefix meaning “milk.” In terms from chemistry, it used to specifically mean “lactate” or “lactic acid.” It is often used in scientific and medical terms.
Lacto- comes from Latin lac (stem lact-), meaning “milk.” The Latin cognate of lac is á (stem galakt-), also meaning “milk,” which is the source of galaxy. To learn more, check out our Words That Use articles on galacto- and galact-.
are variants of lacto-?
When combined with words or word elements that begin with a vowel, lacto- becomes lact-, as in lactose.
A less common variant of lacto-, when combined with some words or word elements that begin with a consonant, is lacti-, as in lactifuge.
Want to know more? Read our Words That Use articles about lact- and lacti-.
Examples of lacto-
One example of a scientific term that uses the form lacto- is lactogen, “an agent that stimulates lactation.”
The lacto- part of the word means “milk,” as we already know. The second part of lactogen is the combining form -gen, which means “that which produces.” Lactogen literally translates to “that which produces milk.”
are some words that use the combining form lacto-?
are some other forms that lacto- may be commonly confused with?
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