Katastrophe
Yes, the word "catastrophe" has its roots in Greek, coming from the word "katastrophē" which means "overturning" or "sudden turn."
The word "catastrophe" comes from the Greek word "katastrophē," which means "overturning" or "sudden turn." It is used to describe a sudden and widespread disaster.
One common suffix that can be added to "catastrophe" is "-ic," resulting in the word "catastrophic." This suffix is used to describe something that is characteristic of or related to a catastrophe.
The root word of "unusual" is "usual."
The root word is gift.
The root word of "endless" is "end."
There are four syllables in the word 'catastrophe.' ca-tas-tro-phe
The word "catastrophe" is a noun, a word for a sudden disaster or a complete failure; a word for a thing.
Catastrophe.
Catastrophe
Here is an example sentence with the word "catastrophe":The Chernobyl disaster was truly a catastrophe, 350400 people had to evacuate from their homes and thousands suffered from radioactive related diseases.
calamity
Four.
catastrophe
"My mother told me yesterday that my room was a 'catastrophe,' so I decided to clear a path for her on the floor."
"catastrophe"
We couldn't imagine what type of catastrophe had caused so much destruction in our small town.
master disaster