Sunday, October 20, 2019
The Combining Form -pod
The Combining Form -pod  The Combining Form -pod  The Combining Form -pod                                      By Maeve Maddox                                            	  The Greek and Latin words for leg and foot have given English the combining form -pod.   Some words formed with -pod entered English earlier, but a great many were coined in the nineteenth century as the study of entomology and paleontology expanded. Here are a few, with their literal meanings and the date of their earliest citation in the OED.  arthropod 1861 (arthro=joint)  Insects, spiders, and crustaceans are arthropods.   cephalopod 1826 (cephal=head)  Cephalopods are creatures like octopus and squid whose ââ¬Å"legsâ⬠ are attached directly to their heads.  diplopod 1864 (diplo=double)  Diplopods have numerous legs, attached in pairs on each segment of the body. Thousand-leggers (millipedes) are diplopods.  gastropod 1826 (gastro=stomach)  A snail is a gastropod. It moves along with a single muscular ââ¬Å"footâ⬠ attached to its abdomen.  hexapod 1668 (hex=six)  Insects are hexapods.  isopod 1835 (iso=equal)  An isopod has seven pairs of equal and similarly placed thoracic legs. A familiar isopod is the roly-poly (aka woodlouse/pillbug).  myriapod  (myria=10,000) Some of these pod words overlap. A myriapod, like a diplopod, has a lot of legs attached in pairs to the segments of their bodies.  octopod 1817 (octo=eight)  Literally ââ¬Å"eight-legged,â⬠ an octopod is a cephalopod with eight tentacles.  ornithopod 1886 (ornith=bird)  This name attaches to plant-eating dinosaurs with bird-shaped hips, three- or four-toed feet, powerful teeth and jaws and lack of such features as armor plating.  polypod 1612 (poly=many)  Any animal with several feet is a polypod.  pseudopod 1874 (pseudo=false)  The one-celled amoeba moves by extending bits of its central blob and using them as feet.  pteropod 1833 (ptero=wing)  These are sea mollusks whose ââ¬Å"feetâ⬠ have side projections that look like wings. Some pteropods have the lovely common names of ââ¬Å"sea butterfliesâ⬠ and ââ¬Å"sea angels.â⬠   sauropod 1884 (sauro=lizard)  Literally ââ¬Å"lizard-footed,â⬠ the sauropods were the really big dinosaurs, like Brachiosaurus, Diplodocus, and Brontosaurus.  Note: The Diplodocus got its name from a peculiarity of its tail bones. The word combines diplo, double+ dokos, beam.   theropod 1891 (ther=beast)  Theropods are the carnivorous dinosaurs whose feet resembled those of quadrupeds rather than birds.  Other English words contain the element pod as a prefix or suffix, but this post focuses on animals.                                          Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily!                Keep learning! Browse the Vocabulary category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:10 Rules for Writing Numbers and NumeralsUsing the Active Voice to Strengthen Your Writing12 Misunderstood and Misquoted Shakespearean Expressions    
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