The combined form for bladder is cysto- as in cystoscope or urinary cystogram.
No, "combineded" is not a word in English. The correct form would be "combined."
Chole- is the combining form found in cholecystokinin. It means gall bladder.
The word you're looking for is.... paper !
To form an infinitive, we combine the word 'to' and a verb. For example, let us combine the word 'to' and the verb 'ask'. We have the infinitive 'to ask'.An example of the infinitive in a sentence: To askhonestly is to hope for an honest answer.
Roots that are derived from an independent word and may be used together or with affixes to form new words.
As a word in and of itself, 1860 brought us the shortening of the word photograph.As a prefix, photo-, a combined form meaning "light" or "photographic" comes to the Englishlanguage from the Greek photo-, itself a combined form of phos, meaning "light", from the PIEbase *bha-, meaning "to shine".
The word "stairs" can be combined with "up" to form "upstairs," with "down" to form "downstairs," and with "house" to form "stairhouse."
They are synonyms. They are sometimes combined to form the word guesstimate.
No, "handfinger" is not a compound word. In compound words, two separate words are combined to create a new word with a distinct meaning. In this case, "hand" and "finger" are both individual, standalone words, not combined to form a new word.
Yes, "background" is a compound word, consisting of the words "back" and "ground" combined to form a single word with its own meaning.
No, it is not combined in one word.
No, there is not typically a space between "can" and "not." When combined, they form the word "cannot" or the contraction "can't."