Latin fidere, meaning 'trust, believe, be loyal'.
Latin credere, menaing 'believe'.
Con- and fidere are the Latin roots of the English word "confidence."Specifically, the prefix con- means "with." The infinitive fidere means "to believe in." The pronunciations will be "kohn" and "fee-deh-rey" in classical and liturgical Latin.
It comes from the Latin "credo" to believe.
Nanni
it means like annually
va
Scire--to know.
plic
The word "conscience" comes from the Latin word "conscientia," which means "knowledge within oneself" or "consciousness." Its roots can be traced back to the Latin verb "conscire," which means "to be aware" or "to know."
De- and notare are the Latin roots of 'denotation'. The prefix 'de-' means 'from'. The infinitive 'notare' means 'to distinguish, mark'.
Scio, scire, scivi, and scitum are Latin roots for 'to know'. Approximately fifty-percent of English words are derived from Latin.
Silver. Incidentally, gold is Au. Both, I believe, come from the Latin roots of the word gold in Latin: "aurum"
"Cardio" means related to the heart (from Greek "kardia"). "Vascular" is from Latin "vasculum" meaning a vessel.