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omni-

  1. a combining form meaning “all,” used in the formation of compound words:

    omnifarious; omnipotence; omniscient.



omni-

combining_form

  1. all or everywhere

    omnipresent



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Word History and Origins

Origin of omni-1

< Latin, combining form of omnis

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Word History and Origins

Origin of omni-1

from Latin omnis all

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Example Sentences

I suspect his final opera omni in a critical German edition will equal in length that of Augustine, Aquinas, and Bonaventure.

On Friday, O'Donnell arrived at the Omni Shoreham like a conquering hero.

Clinton, the omni-directional apologizer, declared that America owed no apology to Japan for using the atomic bomb.

Which leads us to the encounter with Ziegler in the lobby of the Omni Shoreham.

"Lilium, cojus vox generali et licentiosa usurpatione adscribitur omni flori commendabili" (Laurembergius, 1632).

Quam qui infringere vel minuere presumpserit, extrahat eum dominus et evertat de terra viventium cum omni posteritate sua.

Of Theodebert, grandson of Clovis, the same historian says, Magnum se et in omni bonitate prcipuum reddidit.

This view is the basis of the dictum de omni et nullo, on which is supposed to rest the validity of all reasoning.

Coercitionem in histriones magistratibus in omni tempore et loco lege vetere permissam ademit.

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omn. hor.omnia mutantur, nos et mutamur in illis