anthropo-

Etymology
Combining form of.

Usage notes
In English found primarily in complete loanwords from Greek, Latin, since the second half of the 16th century.

Not generally productive in English, but some words are based on medieval or early modern Latin coinages, e.g., from Renaissance-era Latin , and some more recent coinages, such as (1839, from French).

Translations

 * Afrikaans: antropo-
 * Albanian: antropo-
 * Aragonese: antropo-
 * Armenian: անթրոպո-
 * Asturian: antropo-
 * Azerbaijani: antropo-
 * Basque: antropo-
 * Belarusian: антрапа-
 * Bulgarian: антропо-
 * Catalan: antropo-
 * Czech: antropo-
 * Danish: antropo-
 * Dutch:
 * Esperanto: antropo-
 * Estonian: antropo-
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * Galician:
 * Georgian: ანთროპო-
 * German:
 * Greek: ανθρωπο-
 * Hebrew: אַנְתְּרוֹפּוֹ־
 * Hungarian:
 * Ido: antropo-
 * Indonesian: antropo-
 * Interlingua: anthropo-
 * Irish: antrapa-
 * Italian:
 * Kazakh: антропо-
 * Kurdish:
 * Northern Kurdish: antropo-
 * Kyrgyz: антропо-
 * Latin: anthropo-
 * Latvian: antropo-
 * Lithuanian: antropo-
 * Macedonian: антропо-
 * Malay: antropo-
 * Maltese: antropo-
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål:
 * Nynorsk: antropo-
 * Occitan: antropo-
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese: antropo-
 * Romanian:
 * Cyrillic: антропо-
 * Russian:
 * Sicilian: antropo-
 * Slovak: antropo-
 * Slovene: antropo-
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog: antropo-
 * Turkish: antropo-
 * Turkmen: antropo-
 * Ukrainian: антропо-
 * Uzbek:
 * Walloon:
 * Yiddish: אַנטראָפּאָ־

Etymology
From.

Prefix

 * 1) anthropo-