It comes from the ancient Greek word ἐπιτομή (epitomē), which means:
"an abridgment," or "a summary."
2025-07-12 17:41:36
2
Anglo-hausa Alphabet. :
Please, "theme" pronunciation?
2025-07-14 16:30:22
1
Butcher10 :
It also means: A brief summary as of a book or article an abstract.
2025-07-13 03:03:39
3
Lotfi :
I read it : EP-EE-TOHM 🤭. Thank you so much teacher Rachel 😊👍🏾
2025-07-12 17:34:08
1
brba12._ :
Epiremy I can’t pronounce it
2025-07-13 18:24:24
2
Jonathan :
That word looks like it’s from a medical pills or something
2025-07-13 15:33:48
1
Azzondo :
ኧፕረሚ
2025-07-14 02:13:42
1
DrIkkeILLyanaCarolinaKalfM.ed :
I
2025-07-12 22:12:42
1
Gamers :
Rachael is the epitome of English language
2025-07-27 08:25:40
0
Edufun2023 :
Modern English:
"Epitome" is used to mean:
"a perfect example or embodiment" of a quality or type.
E.g. "She is the epitome of grace."
That meaning evolved from the idea of a "summary" — something that captures the essence of a larger thing.
2025-07-12 17:42:42
0
Gailan Qadir Xoshnaw :
🥰
2025-07-13 07:42:37
1
FrenchPourToi :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-07-12 17:36:35
1
Dogan Alp :
❤❤❤
2025-07-25 05:58:20
0
Dr fatima Kawir :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2025-07-23 07:34:41
0
Si English :
🤗🤗🤗
2025-07-21 19:32:52
0
Ruach yohanes ys :
🥰
2025-07-19 07:46:18
0
pvsda :
😭
2025-07-18 07:03:22
0
Kumsi :
🥰
2025-07-15 16:42:24
0
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