Gaia

Etymology
Borrowed from, from , probably related to.

Sense 1 was coined by the British scientist, environmentalist, and futurist (born 1919) in his book Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth (1979), at the suggestion of the British novelist, playwright, and poet  (1911–1993): see the quotation.

Pronunciation

 * (Gaia hypothesis)
 * (Goddess of the Earth)

Proper noun

 * 1)  The ecosystem of the Earth regarded as a self-regulating superorganism.
 * 2)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.
 * 1)  A Greek goddess, the personification of the earth, and one of the primordial deities from whom all the others descend.

Translations

 * Arabic: غَايَا
 * Bengali: গাইয়া
 * Chinese:
 * Cantonese: 蓋亞
 * Mandarin: 蓋亞
 * Wu: 盖娅
 * Esperanto: Gaja
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * Greek:
 * Hebrew: גאיה
 * Icelandic: Gaju
 * Japanese: ガイア
 * Korean: ^가이아
 * Malayalam: ഗെയാ
 * Norwegian: Gaia
 * Occitan: Gaïa
 * Persian: گایا
 * Polish:
 * Serbo-Croatian: Геја,
 * Ukrainian: Ге́ї

Etymology
From.

Etymology
Feminine form of.

Etymology
From.