Machine Latin

Machine Latin




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Machine Latin
https://www.etymonline.com/word/machine
Etymology of machine by etymonline
Harper, D. (n.d.). Etymology of machine. Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved October 14, 2022, from https://www.etymonline.com/word/machine
Harper Douglas, “Etymology of machine,” Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed October 14, 2022, https://www.etymonline.com/word/machine.
Harper, Douglas. “Etymology of machine.” Online Etymology Dictionary, https://www.etymonline.com/word/machine. Accessed 14 October, 2022.
D. Harper. “Etymology of machine.” Online Etymology Dictionary. https://www.etymonline.com/word/machine (accessed October 14, 2022).
Definitions of machine from WordNet
any mechanical or electrical device that transmits or modifies energy to perform or assist in the performance of human tasks ;
the boxer was a magnificent fighting machine
an intricate organization that accomplishes its goals efficiently ;
a device for overcoming resistance at one point by applying force at some other point ;
a group that controls the activities of a political party ;
he was endorsed by the Democratic machine
a motor vehicle with four wheels ; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine ;
turn, shape, mold, or otherwise finish by machinery ;
Etymologies are not definitions. From wordnet.princeton.edu, not affiliated with etymonline.
1540s, "structure of any kind," from Middle French machine "device, contrivance," from Latin machina "machine, engine, military machine; device, trick; instrument" (source also of Spanish maquina , Italian macchina ), from Greek makhana , Doric variant of Attic mēkhanē "device, tool, machine;" also "contrivance, cunning," traditionally (Watkins) from PIE *magh-ana- "that which enables," from root *magh- "to be able, have power." But Beekes, on formal grounds, objects to the connection to words in Germanic and Slavic. He finds the Greek word isolated and is convinced that it is Pre-Greek.
Main modern sense of "device made of moving parts for applying mechanical power" (1670s) probably grew out of mid-17c. senses of "apparatus, appliance" and "military siege-tower." It gradually came to be applied to an apparatus that works without the strength or skill of the workman.
From 17c.-19c. also "a vehicle; a stage- or mail-coach; a ship," and, from 1901, "a motor-car." Also in late 19c. slang the word was used for both "penis" and "vagina," one of the few so honored.
The political sense "a strict organization of the working members of a political party to secure a predominating influence for themselves and their associates" is U.S. slang, attested by 1876. Machine age , a time notable for the extensive use of mechanical devices, is attested by 1882, though there is this:
Machine for living (in) "house" translates Le Corbusier's machine à habiter (1923).
mid-15c., "decide, resolve," from Old French and Latin usages, from Latin machina "machine, engine, military machine; device, trick; instrument," from Greek makhana , Doric variant of Attic mēkhanē "device, tool; contrivance, cunning" (see machine (n.)). Meaning "to apply machinery to, to make or form on or by the aid of a machine" is from 1878. Related: Machined ; machining .
Proto-Indo-European root meaning "to be able, have power." It forms all or part of: dismay ; deus ex machina ; may (v.1) "am able;" might (n.) "bodily strength, power;" main ; machine ; mechanic ; mechanism ; mechano- ; mage ; magi ; magic .
It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit mahan "great;" Greek mēkhanē "device, means," mekhos , makhos "means, instrument;" Old Church Slavonic mošti , Russian moč' "can, be able;" Old English mæg "I can," Gothic mag "can, is able," Old High German magan , Old Norse magn "power, might."
digraph used in Old French for the "tsh" sound. In some French dialects, including that of Paris (but not that of Picardy), Latin ca- became French "tsha." This was introduced to English after the Norman Conquest, in words borrowed from Old French such as chaste , charity , chief (adj.). Under French influence, -ch- also was inserted into Anglo-Saxon words that had the same sound (such as bleach , chest , church ) which in Old English still was written with a simple -c- , and into those that had formerly been spelled with a -c- and pronounced "k" such as chin and much .
As French evolved, the "t" sound dropped out of -ch- , so in later loan-words from French - ch- has only the sound "sh-" ( chauffeur , machine (n.), chivalry , etc.).
It turns up as well in words from classical languages ( chaos , echo , etc.). Most uses of -ch- in Roman Latin were in words from Greek, which in Greek would be pronounced correctly as /k/ + /h/, as in modern blockhead , but most Romans would have said merely /k/, and this was the regular pronunciation in English. Before c. 1500 such words were regularly spelled with a -c- ( Crist, cronicle, scoole ), but Modern English has preserved or restored the etymological spelling in most of them ( chemical , chorus , monarch ). 
Sometimes ch- is written to keep -c- hard before a front vowel, as still in modern Italian. In some languages (Welsh, Spanish, Czech) ch- can be treated as a separate letter and words in it are alphabetized after -c- (or, in Czech and Slovak, after -h- ). The sound also is heard in words from more distant languages (as in cheetah , chintz ), and the digraph also is used to represent the sound in Scottish loch .


















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Target language: Afrikaans Albanian Amharic Arabic Armenian Azerbaijani Bajan Balkan Gipsy Basque Bemba Bengali Bielarus Bislama Bosnian Breton Bulgarian Burmese Catalan Cebuano Chamorro Chinese (Simplified) Chinese Traditional Comorian (Ngazidja) Coptic Creole English (Antigua and Barbuda) Creole English (Bahamas) Creole English (Grenadian) Creole English (Guyanese) Creole English (Jamaican) Creole English (Vincentian) Creole English (Virgin Islands) Creole French (Haitian) Creole French (Saint Lucian) Creole French (Seselwa) Creole Portuguese (Upper Guinea) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Dzongkha English Esperanto Estonian Fanagalo Faroese Finnish French Galician Georgian German Greek Greek (Classical) Gujarati Hausa Hawaiian Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Inuktitut (Greenlandic) Irish Gaelic Italian Japanese Javanese Kabuverdianu Kabylian Kannada Kazakh Khmer Kinyarwanda Kirundi Korean Kurdish Kurdish Sorani Kyrgyz Lao Latin Latvian Lithuanian Luxembourgish Macedonian Malagasy Malay Maldivian Maltese Manx Gaelic Maori Marshallese Mende Mongolian Morisyen Nepali Niuean Norwegian Nyanja Pakistani Palauan Panjabi Papiamentu Pashto Persian Pijin Polish Portuguese Potawatomi Quechua Romanian Russian Samoan Sango Scots Gaelic Serbian Shona Sinhala Slovak Slovenian Somali Sotho, Southern Spanish Sranan Tongo Swahili Swedish Swiss German Syriac (Aramaic) Tagalog Tajik Tamashek (Tuareg) Tamil Telugu Tetum Thai Tibetan Tigrinya Tok Pisin Tokelauan Tongan Tswana Turkish Turkmen Tuvaluan Ukrainian Uma Uzbek Vietnamese Wallisian Welsh Wolof Xhosa Yiddish Zulu


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From professional translators, enterprises, web pages and freely available translation repositories.

god from the machine, in reality benzin



all will bow to the owner of the death machine



from the machine, not for himself but for his country



ad victoriam, ex machina, non sibi sed fraternitati




or else, this machine has been made against our walls,



aut haec in nostros fabricata est machina muros




if you had a time machine, which year would you visit?



si machinam temporis haberes, quem annum inviseres?




to victory, out of the machine, not for self but for the fatherland



ad victoriam, ex machina, non sibi sed patriae



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Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
An artificial kidney these days still means a refrigerator-sized dialysis machine . Such devices mimic the way real kidneys cleanse blood and eject impurities and surplus water as urine.
As the aviator turned his machine to reconnoitre in the new direction, he was surprised to see the hostile aeroplane between him and his objective.
"Joe, how soon will you be ready to roll?" Frank Hardy burst into the garage where his brother was working on a sleek, black-and-silver motorcycle. "Right now, if this machine kicks over," Joe replied, putting down a wrench.
I called you earlier, but all I got was the machine .
Game developers assume they're pushing the limits of the machine .
He refuses to turn off his Linux machine .
Bruce Campbell was a "demon-killing machine " because he made quick work of killing demons.
The government has become a money-making machine .
The whole machine of government, civil and religious, ought never to bear upon the people with a weight so oppressive
1712 May 2 (Gregorian calendar) ​ , Joseph Addison , “MONDAY, April 21, 1712”, in The Spectator , number 351; republished in Alexander Chalmers , editor, The Spectator; a New Edition, [ … ] , volume IV, New York, N.Y.: D[aniel] Appleton & Company , 1853, OCLC 191120697 :
He now reſumes his attempts in more form: firſt he put one of the pillows under me, to give the blank of his aim a more favourable elevation, and another under my head, in eaſe of it: then ſpreading my thighs, and placing himſelf ſtanding between them, made them reſt upon his hips: applying then the point of his machine to the ſlit, into which he ſought entrance;
± show ▼ mechanical or electrical device
± show ▼ group that controls an organization
± show ▼ archaic: vehicle, automobile
± show ▼ a person who is very proficient

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations .

± show ▼ Translations to be checked‌: "machine"
Engineering materials have been recently developed whose hardness and strength are considerably increased, such that the cutting speed and the MRR tend to fall when machining such materials using traditional methods like turning, milling, grinding, and so on.
± show ▼ shape or finish by machinery
Ce type, c'est une vraie machine ! What a guy, he's a real machine!

→ Amharic: ማሽን ( mašn )
→ Azerbaijani: maşın
→ Danish: maskine → Faroese: maskina
→ Dutch: machine Afrikaans: masjien → Caribbean Javanese: mesin → Malay: mesin Indonesian: mesin → Sundanese: ᮙᮨᮞᮤᮔ᮪ ( mesin ) → Sranan Tongo: masyin → Aukan: masini → Caribbean Hindustani: mashin → Galibi Carib: masini → Saramaccan: masíni
→ Estonian: masin
→ German: Maschine ( see there for further descendants )
→ Limburgish: mesjien
→ Norwegian: maskin
→ Pashto: ماشين ‎ ( māšín )
→ Persian: ماشین ‎ ( mâšin ) → Central Kurdish: ماشێن ‎ ( maşên ) → Turkmen: maşyn
→ Polish: maszyna
→ Romanian: mașină ( also via German )
→ Spanish: mashina ( Louisiana )
→ Swedish: maskin
→ Tajik: мошин ( mošin ) , мошина ( mošina ) → Yagnobi: мошин ( mošin )

Borrowed from Middle French machine , from Latin māchina ( “ a machine, engine, contrivance, device, stratagem, trick ” ) , from Doric Greek μᾱχᾰνᾱ́ ( mākhanā́ ) , cognate with Attic Greek μηχᾰνή ( mēkhanḗ , “ a machine, engine, contrivance, device ” ) , from which comes mechanical .

Displaced native Old English searu .

Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
machine ( third-person singular simple present machines , present participle machining , simple past and past participle machined )

Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
Qualifier: (e.g. literally, formally, slang)
Script code : (e.g. Cyrl for Cyrillic, Latn for Latin)
Nesting: (e.g. Serbo-Croatian/Cyrillic)
machine f ( plural machines , diminutive machientje n or machinetje n )

From Middle French machine , borrowed from Latin machina ( “ a machine, engine, co
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