iso- is a prefix from the Greek isos, meaning "equal." It is used primarily in scientific and technical terms, such as isometric, isotonic, and isonomic. (As a stand-alone abbreviation, it often means "in search of.")
The prefix iso- is derived from the Greek word isos. It means equal.
A prefix meaning the same is "syn-" or "co-." An example includes the word "coexist" where "co-" is the prefix that means "together" or "same."
The prefix for inadequate is in-. The prefix in- means not.
The prefix for include is in-. This prefix means not.
what prefix does hypothesis have? what prefix does hypothesis have?
The prefix iso- is derived from the Greek word isos. It means equal.
"Iso" means "Great, Big, Large"
isolate, isosceles, isotope, isometricIsolate and isotope are words. They begin with the letters ISO.
A prefix meaning the same is "syn-" or "co-." An example includes the word "coexist" where "co-" is the prefix that means "together" or "same."
isobar, isometric, isolation, isosceles, isotherm, isoclinical, isolate
Iso is a Greek root meaning 'equal', compares to the Latin 'equi' or 'par'.
Isomers do not have prefix. See any prefix in glucose,galactose,or sucrose?(these three simple sugars are Isomers)
isometric means having the same measurement. <3 me §
I did a bit of internet searching, I think it is iso, as in isotonic and isometric.
Big three; Latin equi- and par-, Greek iso-
not really. The best example is the difference between two matemathical terms: "isomporphism" and "homomorphism"
ISO stands for International Organization for Standardization which is a non-government organization that composes of different international bodies from different countries. They publish different kinds of standards for different kinds of industry in order to aid them in their respective area of interest or endeavour.