The English adjectives belligerent and bellicosederive from the Latin root syllable 'bell-'. The syllable also may be seen in Latin derivatives. For example, the derivative noun bellum means 'war'. The derivative adjectives belliger, bellatorius, and bellatorrespectively mean 'waging war', 'warlike', and 'warrior'.
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The root is the Latin word bellum (war).The word "belligerent" comes from the Latin beliger (warlike) or belligerare (to make war). The root words are bellum (war) and gerer (to make).
Words with the Latin root "civis" include civilization, civic, civilian, and civility.
Some words with the Latin root word "habere" include habit, inhabit, exhibit, and prohibit. The root "habere" means "to have" or "to hold."
There is no root stratos. The root is strat-. The words stratosphere and stratospheric have the Latin root strat- and the Greek word sphere. the o is inserted for euphony (Latin stratus, spreading out)
Some words with the Latin root "arbiter" include "arbitration," "arbitrary," and "arbiter." These words all stem from the Latin word "arbiter," meaning "witness" or "judge."
The words "arachnid" and "arachnophobia" have the Latin root "arachn," which relates to spiders.
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"Cautious," "caution," "cauterize," "cautery," and "cauterize" are words that have the Latin root "caut."
The Latin root for the words tenuous and attenuate is the word tenuis meaning thin.
Some words with the Latin root "theo" include theology, theocracy, and atheist.
Some words that have the Latin root "loqu" are eloquent, loquacious, and colloquial. These words all relate to speaking or conversation.