Anarchia

When the word "anarchy" (Greek: αναρχία, romanized: anarchia) was first defined in ancient Greece, it initially had both a positive and negative connotation, respectively referring to spontaneous order or …

borrowed from Medieval Latin anarchia, borrowed from Greek anarchía "lack of a leader, lawlessness," from ánarchos "without a head or chief, leaderless" (from an- an- + -archos, derivative of archós …

First recorded in 1530–40; from Middle French anarchie or Medieval Latin anarchia or directly from Greek anarchía “lawlessness,” literally, “lack of a leader,” equivalent to ánarch (os) “leaderless” ( an- …

From New Latin anarchia, from Ancient Greek ἀναρχία (anarkhía). By surface analysis, an- +‎ -archy.

This ideal is called anarchy, from the Greek anarchia, meaning absence of government. Anarchists do not suppose that all people are altruistic, or wise, or good, or identical, or perfectible, or any romantic …

"absence of government," from French anarchie or directly from Medieval Latin anarchia,… See origin and meaning of anarchy.

New Latin anarchia from Greek anarkhiā from anarkhos without a ruler an- without a– 1 arkhos ruler –arch From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

Etymology: 16th Century: from Medieval Latin anarchia, from Greek anarkhia, from anarkhos without a ruler, from an- + arkh- leader, from arkhein to rule anarchic /ænˈɑːkɪk/, anˈarchical adj

This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word anarchia. Did you actually mean anarchic or anorchia?

When the word "anarchy" (Greek: αναρχία, romanized: anarchia) was first defined in ancient Greece, it initially had both a positive and negative connotation, respectively referring to spontaneous order or chaos without rulers.

borrowed from Medieval Latin anarchia, borrowed from Greek anarchía "lack of a leader, lawlessness," from ánarchos "without a head or chief, leaderless" (from an- an- + -archos, derivative of archós "leader, chief") + -ia -y entry 2 — more at -arch entry 1

First recorded in 1530–40; from Middle French anarchie or Medieval Latin anarchia or directly from Greek anarchía “lawlessness,” literally, “lack of a leader,” equivalent to ánarch (os) “leaderless” ( an- “without, lacking” + arch (ós) “leader” + -os adjective suffix) + -ia noun suffix; see an- 1, -y 3

This ideal is called anarchy, from the Greek anarchia, meaning absence of government. Anarchists do not suppose that all people are altruistic, or wise, or good, or identical, or perfectible, or any romantic nonsense of that kind.