The combining word for blood is "hem/o" or "sanguin/o." These prefixes are often used in medical terminology, such as in "hemoglobin" (the protein in red blood cells) or "sanguine" (related to blood).
The combining form of the word "asymptomatic" is "asympto-."
The combining form for blood is hem/o or hemat/o.
The combining form for the word cyanosis is cyan/o.
-rrhagia is the medical terminology combining form meaning bleeding.
Suffix, word root (or combining form), prefix.
The combining word is sphygum
blood
A combining form consists of a root word to which a combining vowel has been added. It can also include a prefix or suffix. Combining forms are used in medical terminology to create words that describe a specific condition, procedure, or body part.
There's no combining vowel in exophthalmos.
In the term "thrombocytopenia," the root word is "thrombocyte," which refers to platelets in the blood. The prefix is "thrombo-" meaning clot or clotting, and the suffix is "-penia," indicating a deficiency. There is no combining form in this case, but the combining vowel is typically "o," which is used to connect roots and suffixes in medical terminology.
Conjunctions .
Chole- is the combining form found in cholecystokinin. It means gall bladder.