Contents

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἐγχώριος, from χωρά (“‘country’”).

Pronunciation

Adjective

enchorial (not comparable)

Positive enchorial

Comparative not comparable

Superlative none (absolute)

  1. 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 […]
  2. 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

 

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