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Wikipedia

English[]

Etymology 1[]

From Ancient Greek λόγος (logos), speech, oration, discourse, quote, story, study, ratio, word, calculation, reason).

Noun[]

Singular
Logos

Plural
-

Logos (-)

  1. Template:Philosophy In Presocratic philosophy, the principle governing the cosmos. Among the Sophists, the topics of rational argument. In Stoicism, the active, material, rational principle of the cosmos
  2. (grammar) A form of rhetoric in which the writer or speaker uses logic as the main argument
  3. Template:Judaism The word of God, which itself has creative power; a hypostasis associated with divine wisdom
  4. Template:Christianity The creative word of God, which is itself God and incarnate in Christ
Translations[]
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Help:How to check translations.

Etymology 2[]

Noun[]

logos

  1. Plural form of logo.

Anagrams[]

  • gloos,
  • slogo

Cornish[]

Noun[]

Logos (singulative logosen)[[Category:Template:Kw nouns|Logos]]

  1. mice

Croatian[]

Noun[]

lȏgos m. [[Category:Template:Hr nouns|Logos]]

  1. logos

Esperanto[]

Verb form[]

Template:Eo-verb-form

  1. will entice, will lure

French[]

Noun[]

logos m.

  1. Plural form of logo.

Italian[]

Noun[]

logos m. inv.

  1. logos

Anagrams[]

  • gloos,
  • sgolo, sgolò
  • slogo, slogò

Latvian[]

Noun[]

logos

  1. Plural locative form of logs. (In) windows.
singular plural
nominative logs logi
genitive loga logu
dative logam logiem
accusative logu logus
locative logā logos
vocative log logi

ar:logos el:logos fr:logos gl:logos it:logos sw:logos hu:logos pl:logos ru:logos simple:logos tr:logos vi:logos zh:logos

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