/eˈpoko/
OriginBorrowed from English epoch, German Epoche, French époque, Italian epoca, Polish epoka, Russian эпо́ха (epóxa), all ultimately from Latin epocha, from Ancient Greek ἐποχή (epokhḗ).
- epoch, age (period of time in history)
“Eblas diri, ke ŝi estas "feministo" en epoko, kiam virinoj ankoraŭ ne esperis havi la samajn rajtojn, kiujn havis viroj.” — It's possible to say she was a "feminist" in an epoch, when women didn't yet hope to have the same rights as men did.
Formsepokon(accusative, singular) · epokoj(plural) · epokojn(accusative, plural) · epoĥo(alternative)
Source: Wiktionary