English is a Germanic language and derived from the same sources as Dutch and German. Greek is a language isolate distantly related to English. Latin is an Italic language distantly related to English.
It's a Latin based language, but in the scientific vocabulary, most of the words are Greek or of Greek origin.
The Greek language is very significant in the English language. Many of the root words within the English language come from the Greek and Latin dialect. Some Greek root words include acro, aero, alg, endo, erg, eth, physi, plac, and pro.
It comes from Greek, Latin
Old French. But THEY borrowed it from Latin. From Greek to Latin to French to English
Latin Greek. It means study of man.
Actually, 63% of all English words come from Latin.
Yes, it's possible that Latin has a larger vocabulary than Greek. One reason is the borrowing of many words from the classical language of the ancient Greeks. But just for the record, the borrowing isn't one way. For example, the modern Greek names for the months of the year come from classical Latin.
These is neither Latin nor Greek. These is English.
The English word "drama" comes from the Latin which comes from the Greek.
greek and latin greek and latin
Originally from Greek (meaning leisure, discussion, lecture, school), then to Latin, Old English, and Middle English.
latin
The derivation of "factor" is from Latin, through French and Middle English.
tri- has Latin, Greek as well as middle English origins.
greek
No, latin came from italic, greek came from hellenic.
Division or section is the English meaning of the Latin root 'temp-'. From this root come the Latin noun 'tempus' for time, and the English noun 'temperature'. The Latin nouns 'tempus' and 'templum', which means 'a section, a part cut off', are related to the Greek word 'temenos'. But only the Latin language, not the Greek, is the source for the root 'temp-'.