Manitize mah-nee tahyz - etymological word composition
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (“-ise, -ize”), from Old French -iser (“-ize”), from Latin -izāre (“-ize”), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-ízein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -𐌹𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (“-ise, -ize”), from Old French -iser (“-ize”), from Latin -izāre (“-ize”), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-ízein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -𐌹𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
- I will seek to manitize the system that prevents education inequality.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.
by john.mueller March 28, 2017
Get the Manitize mug.Manitize mah-nee tahyz - etymological word composition
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (“-ise, -ize”), from Old French -iser (“-ize”), from Latin -izāre (“-ize”), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-ízein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -𐌹𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
Noun: Mani
Etymology: From German (Manie) - An excessively intense enthusiasm, interest, or desire: the passionate urge to have to do something; arabic (mani) = prevention of harm; Greek/ late Latin (Mania), = rage, insanity
Suffix:
-ize
-ise (non-Oxford British spelling)
Etymology: From Middle English -isen (“-ise, -ize”), from Old French -iser (“-ize”), from Latin -izāre (“-ize”), from Ancient Greek -ίζειν (-ízein), from Proto-Indo-European *-idyé- (verbal suffix). Cognate with Gothic -𐌹𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (-itjan, verbal suffix), Old High German -izzen (verbal suffix), Old English -ettan (verbal suffix). Used to form verbs from nouns or adjectives, the verbs having the sense of "to make what is denoted by the noun/adjective".
- I will seek to manitize the system that prevents education inequality.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.
- We saw manitize engendered in a wide cross section of pupils.
by john.mueller March 29, 2017
Get the Manitize mug.Related Words
Manini
• Manininist
• maniniyot
• maniniser
• maninism
• Maninist
• Maninite
• Maninizer
• Maninizing
• Manning
Get the Maninating mug.Feeling you get that someone is watching you, in a department store, and when you turn around is just a manikin.
Hey bro. I feel someones watching me. Yeah you big pus, I get that shit all the time from these plastic weirdos here you are you got the manikinoia bro.
by userpthat February 26, 2018
Get the manikinoia mug.Manicing- when you are radically cycling from “I don’t care about anything sadness”. Then cycling to it’s opposite of being uncharacteristically or overly happy and excited.
Upon meeting your mom at the restaurant. You ask her to be gentle with you, you’ve been manicing really hard the last few days.
by Fazzel151 July 28, 2018
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