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histo-

  1. a combining form meaning “tissue,” used in the formation of compound words:

    histology.



histo-

combining_form

  1. indicating animal or plant tissue

    histology

    histamine

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of histo-1

< Greek, combining form of histós web (of a loom), tissue
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Word History and Origins

Origin of histo-1

from Greek, from histos web
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Example Sentences

Buffalo Bills, tying most in team histo Week 8: Redskins vs.

Buffalo Bills, tying most in team histo Week 8: Redskins vs.

Styron calls The Confessions of Nat Turner not a historical novel but a "meditation on histo ry."

Histo, circa 100, famed Indian army scout who led in the capture of the Modoc Indian renegade, Captain Jack; of old age; in Warm Springs Reservation, Ore. The best-paid man in the radio business is Major Edward Bowes, unctuous dominie of Chrysler's Original Amateur Hour each Thursday night at 9 over CBS.

You leave the histo'y books alone foah awhile," Catriona commanded, "and practice.

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Words That Use histo-

What does histo- mean?

The combining form histo- is used like a prefix meaning “tissue.” It is often used in medical terms, especially in anatomy and pathology.

The form histo- comes from Greek histós, meaning “web (of a loom)” or “tissue.”

What are variants of histo-?

When combined with words or word elements that begin with a vowel, histo- becomes hist-, as in histoid. In some rare instances, histo- becomes histio-, as in histioblast. Want to know more? Check out our Words That Use articles for hist- and histio-.

Examples of histo-

One example of a term from medicine that features the form histo- is histology, the branch of biology dealing with the study of tissues.

While histo- means “tissue,” the -logy portion refers to “study,” from Greek logía. Histology literally translates to “the study of tissue.”

What are some words that use the combining form histo-?

What are some other forms that histo- may be commonly confused with?

The word history and related terms begin with the letters histo- but do not use histo- as a combining form. Find out why history comes from the Greek word for “one who knows and sees” at our entry for the word.

Break it down!

The combining form -cyte means “cell.” With this in mind, what does the scientific term histocyte mean?

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histioidhistoblast