The word encyclopedia, which to us usually means a large set of books, descends from a phrase that involved coming to grips with the contents of such books. The Greek phrase is enkuklios paideia, made up of enkuklios, "cyclical, periodic, ordinary," and paideia, "education," and meaning "general education." Copyists of Latin manuscripts took this phrase to be a single Greek word, enkuklopaedia, with the same meaning, and this spurious Greek word became the New Latin word encyclopaedia, coming into English with the sense "general course of instruction," first recorded in 1531. In New Latin the word was chosen as the title of a reference work covering all knowledge. The first such use in English is recorded in 1644.
what mening of the clf
what is mening of base?
mening of soham mening of soham
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eckramul
Legend
malukob
To get.
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The mening of the name Chebundo in Shona language of the African origin is "of the forest, robber, and highway man."
The mening of the name Chatambudza in Shona language of the African origin is "that which has bothered, trouble maker, frustrated, disillusioned."
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