Graecia-magna
[gree-shee-uh mag-nuh] /ˈgri ʃi ə ˈmæg nə/
noun
1.
.
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[gree-sahyz] /ˈgri saɪz/ verb (used with or without object), Graecized, Graecizing. Chiefly British. 1. . [gree-siz-uh m] /ˈgri sɪz əm/ noun 1. the spirit of Greek thought, art, etc. 2. adoption or imitation of this. 3. an idiom or peculiarity of Greek. /ˈɡriːsɪzəm/ noun 1. Greek characteristics or style 2. admiration for or imitation of […]
- Graecize
[gree-sahyz] /ˈgri saɪz/ verb (used with or without object), Graecized, Graecizing. Chiefly British. 1. . [gree-sahyz] /ˈgri saɪz/ verb (used with object), Grecized, Grecizing. 1. to impart Greek characteristics to. 2. to translate into Greek. verb (used without object), Grecized, Grecizing. 3. to conform to what is Greek; adopt Greek speech, customs, etc. /ˈɡriːsaɪz/ verb […]
- Graeco-
Chiefly British. 1. variant of . /ˈɡriːkəʊ; ˈɡrɛkəʊ/ combining form 1. Greek: Graeco-Roman also Greco-, modern word-forming element, from Latin Graecus “Greek” (see Greek).
- Graeco-Roman
[gree-koh-roh-muh n, grek-oh-] /ˌgri koʊˈroʊ mən, ˌgrɛk oʊ-/ adjective, noun, Chiefly British. 1. . [gree-koh-roh-muh n, grek-oh-] /ˌgri koʊˈroʊ mən, ˌgrɛk oʊ-/ adjective 1. of or having both Greek and Roman characteristics: the Greco-Roman influence. 2. pertaining to or designating a style of the fine arts developed in Rome or the Roman Empire from the […]
- Graeffe-method
[gref-uh, graf-uh] /ˈgrɛf ə, ˈgræf ə/ noun, Mathematics. 1. a method, involving the squaring of roots, for approximating the solutions to algebraic equations.