Prefix from the Greek for heaven
Crossword Clue

  • We have found 40 answers to crossword clue "Prefix from the Greek for heaven"
  • The Best Answer: 10/10
AnswerCrossword Clue
URANOPrefix from the Greek for "heaven"
NANOMetric prefix derived from the Greek for "dwarf"
METAPrefix from the Greek for "in common with"
TELEPrefix from Greek for "far"
ERGUnit from the Greek for "work"
OCHREColor from the Greek for "pale"
AZALEAShrub from the Greek for "dry"
ECSTASYWord from the Greek for "trance"
THERAPYWord from the Greek for "healing"
EPITOMEWord from the Greek for "abridgment"
ICONWord from the Greek for "image"
PITAWord from the Greek for "pie"
IODINEWord from the Greek for "purple"
ATHEISTWord from the Greek for "godless"
ASTERFlower from the Greek for "star"
ETNAWord from the Greek for "I burn"
ASPCreature named from the Greek for "shield"
MICROBEWord from the Greek for "little life"
ELIXIRMagical liquid from the Greek for "dry"
RHEASBirds named from the Greek for "ground"
PHLOXPlant from the Greek word for "flame"
POLEMICSArguer's art, from the Greek for "war"
ATOMWord from the Greek for "uncuttable," ironically
MILK"Galaxy" derives from the Greek word for this
ATOMWord that comes from the Greek for "indivisible"
HYSTERIAWord from the Greek for "suffering in the womb"
ALEXISName that comes from the Greek word for "helper"
ZOEName that comes from the Greek word for "life"
ETNAIts name comes from the Greek for "I burn"
WIKIPEDIAReference from the Hawaiian and Greek for "quick education"
IRISFlower whose name comes from the Greek for "rainbow"
XEROXCompany whose name comes from the Greek word for "dry"
ERGPhysics unit that comes from the Greek word for "work"
EOSINDye whose name derives from the Greek word for "dawn"
CHLORINEIts name is derived from the Greek for "pale green"
MANTISInsect with a name from the Greek word for "prophet"
SPIREAFlowering shrub whose name comes from the Greek for "coil"
TETRAAquarium fish with a name that derives from the Greek for "four-sided wing"
astrolabeastronomical instrument for taking the altitude of the sun or stars and for the solution of other problems in astronomy and navigation: used by Greek astronomers from about 200 b.c. and by Arab astronomers from the Middle Ages until superseded by the sext
ionicnoting or pertaining to that variety of the eastern branch of the early Greek alphabet that was used for the writing of the Ionic dialect and that became the variety used for all dialects of Greek from the 4th century b.c. to the present