alogia

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἀλογία (alogia, absurdity; confusion; irrationality; speechlessness).

Noun

alogia (uncountable)

Wikipedia has an article on:

Wikipedia

  1. A general lack of additional, unprompted content in normal speech, a common symptom of schizophrenia.

Anagrams


↑Jump back a section

Latin

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἀλογία (alogia, absurdity; confusion; irrationality; speechlessness).

Noun

alogia (genitive alogiae); f, first declension

  1. Irrational conduct or action; nonsense, folly.
  2. Dumbness, muteness.

Inflection

Number Singular Plural
nominative alogia alogiae
genitive alogiae alogiārum
dative alogiae alogiīs
accusative alogiam alogiās
ablative alogiā alogiīs
vocative alogia alogiae

Related terms

  • alogus
↑Jump back a section

Read in another language

This page is available in 3 languages

Last modified on 20 August 2012, at 12:39