WikiWord

English

parenthesis

/pəˈɹɛn.θə.sɪs/ · noun

Meaning

  1. A clause, phrase or word which is inserted (usually for explanation or amplification) into a passage which is already grammatically complete, and usually marked off with brackets, commas or dashes.
  2. Either of a pair of brackets, especially (mainly US) round brackets, ( and ) (used to enclose parenthetical material in a text).
  3. A digression; the use of such digressions.
  4. Such brackets as used to clarify expressions by grouping those terms affected by a common operator, or to enclose the components of a vector or the elements of a matrix.

Etymology / origin

Learned borrowing from Late Latin parenthesis (“addition of a letter to a syllable in a word”), itself borrowed from Ancient Greek παρένθεσις (parénthesis, “insertion”). By surface analysis, par- + en- + thesis.

  1. παρένθεσις(Ancient Greek)
  2. parenthesis(la-lat)
  3. parenthesis (English)
  4. Relations: lbor, der

Related words

Descendant words

Sources

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