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-glot
- a combining form with the meanings “having a tongue,†“speaking, writing, or written in a language†of the kind or number specified by the initial element:
polyglot.
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
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51³Ô¹Ïs That Use -glot
What does -glot mean?
The combining form -glot is used like a suffix meaning “having a tongue.†The meaning of tongue here is often metaphorical, as in “language.†This is how -glot comes to mean “speaking, writing, or written in a language.†It is occasionally used in technical terms.
The form -glot comes from Greek -glottos, meaning “tongued.†The Latin translation is lingua, “tongue,†which is the source of words such as linguistic and bilingual. Find out more at our entries for both words.
What are variants of -glot?
While not variants of -glot, the combining forms gloss-, glosso-, and glotto- are used as prefixes to mean “tongue, word, speech.†Want to know more? Read our 51³Ô¹Ïs That Use articles for these forms.
Examples of -glot
An example of a word you may have encountered that features -glot is polyglot, “able to speak or write several languages; multilingual.†Polyglot comes from Greek ±è´Ç±ôý²µ±ôųٳٴDzõ, which features the equivalent form of -glot in the language.
While -glot means “speaking in a language,†the poly- portion means “much, many,†from Greek ±è´Ç±ôý²õ. Polyglot literally translates to “speaking many languages.â€
What are some words that use the combining form -glot?
What are some other forms that -glot may be commonly confused with?
Not every word that begins with the exact letters -glot, such as giglot, is necessarily using the combining form -glot to denote “tongued.†Learn why giglot, or giglet, means “a giddy girl†at our entry for the word.
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