noun
the methods or techniques used to teach adults.
Andragogy is usually used in contrast to pedagogy, the art or science of teaching. Andragogy was formed by replacing the ped- element, meaning “child,” with the element andr-, meaning “man, male,” which comes from Ancient Greek ḗr, “man.” Andragogy is used to refer to the teaching of all adults—though, a more gender-neutral term could be invented using the Ancient Greek form áԳٳōDz, “human, person.” Andragogy was first recorded in English in the late 1920s.
EXAMPLE OF ANDRAGOGY USED IN A SENTENCE
The professor’s background in andragogy allowed her to better anticipate the learning needs of her graduate students.
noun
a minute or microscopic animal, nearly or quite invisible to the naked eye.
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Animalcule comes from New Latin animalculum, “small animal.” The animal- element comes from Latin Ծ, meaning “living” or, literally, “airy, breathy.” The suffix -culum, “small,” also appears in disguise in the Words of the Day canicular and osculate. Animalcule was first recorded in English in the 1590s.
EXAMPLE OF ANIMALCULE USED IN A SENTENCE
Pressed between the two glass slides, a variety of animalcules drifted and skittered through the narrow band of water.
Prismatic is based on Ancient Greek î, literally meaning “something sawed.” The noun, prism, can refer to a transparent object created with cut angles that is used to disperse light into a spectrum. Prismatic was first recorded in English at the turn of the 18th century.
EXAMPLE OF PRISMATIC USED IN A SENTENCE
A prismatic array of colors reflected onto the wall as the sunlight struck the glass artwork.