to send
"Miss" isn't a full Latin word. It's a portion of a principal part of "mitto, mittere, misi, missum," which means "send." "Miss" is the root from which we get the English words "missile" and "mission."
The roots of 'admit' are 'ad' and 'mittere'. The preposition 'ad' means 'to'. The verb 'mittere' means 'to send'.
In a Latin text, mitte is the singular imperative form of the verb mittere, "to send". It can be translated as the request/command "send!".As a root in an English word, "mitt-" or "mitte-" indicates derivation from mittere or one of its derived forms, such as committere "to send together"; intermittere "to send between", etc.
The Latin equivalent of the English verb 'eliminate' is eliminare. The verb in English literally means 'to get rid of'. The verb in Latin literally means 'to carry out of doors'.
The Latin root of 'receding' is "recedere," which means "to go back" or "to retreat."
Donate is an English derivative of the Latin for 'to give'. The original Latin verb is 'donare'. The Latin verb literally means 'to give as a present'.
The Latin verb disco means "I learn" or "I acquire knowledge".
The Latin word 'coquus' means "cook" in English. It is derived from the verb "coquere," which means "to cook" or "to prepare food."
No, "mihi" is not a verb in Latin. It is a pronoun meaning "to me" or "for me."
Agricola is not a verb. It is a noun and means farmer.
The Latin verb pingo means "I paint" or "I embroider", "I embelish" or "I tattoo"
The Latin word dona means "gift", the Latin verb donare means "to give"the past participle of that verb is donatus or "given" from which we get the English donate