Advertisement
Advertisement
oligo-
- a combining form meaning “few,” “little,” used in the formation of compound words:
oligopoly.
oligo-
combining_form
- indicating a few or little
oligopoly
Word History and Origins
Origin of oligo-1
Word History and Origins
Origin of oligo-1
Example Sentences
“But instead of using an antisense oligo to force an exon that was being ignored to be included, we were using an antisense oligo to shut down an exon that was getting in the way.”
That’s because foods like these contain hard-to-digest carbohydrates called fermentable oligo-, di-, monosaccharides and polyols.
Other possible triggers for gastric difficulties could be Fodmaps, or Fermentable, Oligo-, Di- and Mono-saccharides and Polyols.
The free TdT is washed away, and the oligo is ready for the next base to be added.
Most new nucleotides attach to the growing oligo in 10 to 20 seconds, Palluk, Arlow, Keasling, and their colleagues report today in Nature Biotechnology.
Advertisement
Words That Use oligo-
What does oligo- mean?
Oligo– is a combining form used like a prefix meaning “few; little.” It is occasionally used in scientific terms, especially in biology.
Oligo– comes from Greek olígos, meaning “little, small, few.” The Latin equivalent of olígos is paucus “few, little, small (number of),” which is the source of English terms such as paucity. To learn more, check out our entry on paucity.
What are variants of oligo-?
When combined with words or word elements that begin with a vowel, oligo– becomes olig-, as in oligemia.
Examples of oligo-
One example of a scientific term that features the form oligo– is oligopnea, “abnormally infrequent respiration.”
The combining form oligo– means “few” or “little,” as we have already seen, but what about the –pnea part of the word? It means “breath” or “respiration,” from Greek –pnoia.
What are some words that use the combining form oligo– or olig-?
- oligoamnios
- oligarch (using the equivalent form of olig- in Greek)
- oligochaete
- oligoclase
- oligogene
- oligopoly
- oligopsony
What are some other forms that oligo– may be commonly confused with?
Break it down!
The combining form –clase denotes minerals with a particular cleavage. With this in mind, what is an oligoclase?
Words That Use oligo-
What does oligo- mean?
Oligo- is a combining form used like a prefix meaning “few; little.” It is occasionally used in scientific terms, especially in biology.
Oligo- comes from Greek olígos, meaning “little, small, few.” The Latin equivalent of olígos is paucus “few, little, small (number of),” which is the source of English terms such as paucity. To learn more, check out our entry on paucity.
What are variants of oligo-?
When combined with words or word elements that begin with a vowel, oligo- becomes olig-, as in oligemia.
Examples of oligo-
One example of a scientific term that features the form oligo- is oligopnea, “abnormally infrequent respiration.”
The combining form oligo- means “few” or “little,” as we have already seen, but what about the -pnea part of the word? It means “breath” or “respiration,” from Greek -pnoia.
What are some words that use the combining form oligo- or olig-?
- oligoamnios
- oligarch (using the equivalent form of olig- in Greek)
- oligochaete
- oligoclase
- oligogene
- oligopoly
- oligopsony
What are some other forms that oligo- may be commonly confused with?
Break it down!
The combining form -clase denotes minerals with a particular cleavage. With this in mind, what is an oligoclase?
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse