No. This word come from a Latin word meaning lecture hall, which is not a verb..
Without knowing what the following information is there really is not a way to know which is correct. A person would need to know the words to know which derives from a root word.
The root word of "auditorium" is "audire," which is Latin for "to hear." The word "auditorium" originally referred to a place where people could listen or hear performances, lectures, or presentations.
Audition, auditory, Auditorium.
The root from which 'monit' derives is the Latin 'monere', to remind or warn.
The historic meaning for Katniss derives from the Katniss Root.
The historic meaning for Katniss derives from the Katniss Root.
The English word bin derives from the Indo-European root bhendh- meaning bind.The Arabic word bin, as in the name Suleiman bin Doud ( Solomon son of David) derives from the root ibn, meaning son.
The syllable ind- is the Latin root for 'Indian'. From that root derives the noun 'India', as the name of the Southeast Asian country. From it also derives the noun 'Indus', as the word for an inhabitant of India.
There's no Latin root to 'lingered'. The English word instead derives from the Old English. So the root is lengan, which means to prolong.
Fascinate derives from the Latin fascinare, meaning to enchant or cast a spell.
The word derives from ancient Greece, meaning "horse of the river".
a definition is what it means, a derivative is what it derives from, like a root word