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hect-
- variant of hecto- before a vowel:
hectare.
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˜yÐÄvlogs That Use hect-
What does hect- mean?
Hect- is a combining form used like a prefix meaning “hundred.†It is very occasionally used in technical terms, especially in measurements.
Hect- comes from Greek ³ó±ð°ì²¹³Ùó²Ô, meaning “hundred,†which is distantly related both to English hundred and Latin centum, “hundred.†Find out more at our entries for cent and hundred.
What are variants of hect-?
Hect- is a variant of hecto-, which loses its -o- when combined with words or word elements beginning with vowels. Want to know more? Read our ˜yÐÄvlogs That Use hecto- article.
In some rare instances, hecto- and hect- are spelled with a -k-, becoming hekto- and hekt-.
Examples of hect-
One example of a technical term that features the combining form hect- is hectare, “a unit of surface, or land, measure equal to 100 ares, or 10,000 square meters.†Hectare comes from the French hectare, which uses the equivalent of the form hect-.
The hect- portion of the word means “hundred,†while the -are portion of the word is “a measure of surface area equal to 100 square meters,†from Latin Äå°ù±ð²¹. Hectare literally translates to “a hundred ares.â€
What are some words that use the combining form hect-?
- hectad
What are some other forms that hect- may be commonly confused with?
Not every word that begins with the letters hect-, such as hectic, is necessarily using the combining form hect- to mean “hundred.†Learn why hectic means “busy†at our entry for the word.
Break it down!
The suffix -ad indicates a group or unit that includes a certain number. Based on the meaning of hect-, what is a hectad?
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