| -aemia, (US) -haemia, (US) -emia or (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| denoting blood, esp a specified condition of the blood in names of diseases: leukaemia | |
| [New Latin, from Greek -aimia, from haima blood] | |
| -haemia, (US) -haemia, (US) -emia or (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| [New Latin, from Greek -aimia, from haima blood] | |
| -emia, (US) -haemia, (US) -emia or (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| [New Latin, from Greek -aimia, from haima blood] | |
| -hemia, (US) -haemia, (US) -emia or (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| [New Latin, from Greek -aimia, from haima blood] | |
| an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle. |
| the offspring of a zebra and a donkey. |
| -haemia or esp (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| variants of -aemia | |
| -hemia or esp (US) -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| -hemia | |
| —n combining form | |
| US variant of -aemia | |
-hemia suff.
Variant of -emia.