No. All words in English ending in -cede (or -ceed) are of Latin origin. (accede, proceed, concede, succeed, secede, intercede, etc).
Root ="light" (Germanic) The non-root suffix "-en" = "to cause to be ..." The non-root prefix "en-" = Italic "in-" (an intensifier) in its French form (probably). This would make the word "enlighten" a hybrid, a mixture of Germanic and Italic.
The root word for "ladder" is "Hlæder" from Old English.
Hand is a core Germanic vocabulary word, presumed to derive from a Germanic root *handuz which is unattested.
Bell is not a Greek root. It's Germanic in origin (and possibly Dutch). It means "bell."
Fearful
The root word for "two" is the Old English word "twā," which evolved from the Proto-Germanic word "twai."
There is no Greek or Latin root for "eerie". It's of Germanic ancestry, from an Old English word meaning "cowardly".
There is no root "ously." It is a pair of suffixes: the Latin-derived adjectival suffix -ous; and the Germanic adverbial suffix -ly.
The root of the word "fire" comes from the Old English word "fȳr", which traces back to the Proto-Germanic word "fūr".
The root word for holiness is "holy," which comes from the Old English word "hālig" and ultimately from the Proto-Germanic word "hailag."
its comes from the germanic root word "sal" which means building, so... Germany
"Gold" is a descendant of a Germanic term somehow related to the Latin root aur-. English is primarily a Germanic language with plenty of Latin influence.