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Autochthonous vs Enchorial - What's the difference?

autochthonous | enchorial | Synonyms |

Enchorial is a synonym of autochthonous.



As adjectives the difference between autochthonous and enchorial

is that autochthonous is native to the place where found; indigenous while enchorial is indigenous, native.

autochthonous

English

Adjective

(-)
  • Native to the place where found; indigenous.
  • * 1889 , Justin Winsor, Narrative and Critical History of America , Vol. I, page 375:
  • Two of the most celebrated of the evolutionists reject the autochthonous view, for Darwin's Descent of Man'' and Haeckel's ''Hist. of Creation consider the American man an emigrant from the old world, whatever way the race may have developed
  • * {{quote-book, year= 1983
  • , year_published= , author= (Isaac Asimov) , by= , title= (The Robots of Dawn) , url= , original= , chapter= 22 , section= , isbn= 0-553-29949-2 , edition= , publisher= Bantam Books , location= , editor= , volume= , page= 116 , passage= Only human beings could live on this world and know that they were not autochthonous but had stemmed from Earthmen—and yet did the Spacers really know it or did they simply put it out of their mind? }}
  • (biology, medicine) Originating where found; found where it originates.
  • * 1983 , Journal of the Medical Society of New Jersey , volume 80, page 538:
  • When, in 1858, Joseph Lister amputated the right leg of a six-year-old girl suffering from gangrene, he noted that the autochthonous blood clot extended down the anterior tibial artery as far as the commencement of the gangrene.
  • (geology) Buried in place, especially of a fossil preserved in its life position without disturbance or disarticulation.
  • * 1992 , Anna K. Behrensmeyer, et al., Terrestrial Ecosystems Through Time , page 83:
  • Death and burial may be simultaneous, resulting in a preserved snapshot of an autochthonous assemblage that may be compared directly with present day ecosystems.

    Synonyms

    * (native to the place where found) aboriginal, autochthonic, indigenous, native

    Antonyms

    * (sense) allochthonous

    Derived terms

    * autochthonously * parautochthonous

    enchorial

    English

    Adjective

    (-)
  • Indigenous, native.
  • * 1900 , George Johnson, "Place-Names" in'' George Upham Hay (ed.), ''Canadian History Readings , volume 1?, page 89
  • Well, the right name, Ouigoudi , if it had been continued as the name of the settlement, would be styled an enchorial name. St. John is an imported name, having been taken from the river to which the name was given by deMonts and Champlain in 1604 because they discovered it on St. John the Baptist's Day
  • Of, relating to, or written in the vulgar form of ancient Egyptian hieratic writing.
  • * 1872 , Philip Smith, A Smaller Ancient History of the East , page 130
  • The inscription of the Rosetta Stone is written in hieroglyphics'' and in ''enchorial letters, with a Greek translation.

    Synonyms

    * (indigenous) autochthonous, indigenous, native * (of the vulgar form of hieratic writing) demotic, enchoric