No the President's veto power is part of the checks and balances on Congress.
Veto is not actually Greek it is Latin verb; Veto, Vetare, Vetui, Vetitus meaning To Forbid or Tell not to. The first principle part of the verb Veto is where the English word Veto comes from meaning "I" Forbid. Hope that helps ^_^
"veto" means 'I forbid', which is exactly how the term is used in international politics.
The word that comes from the Latin term meaning "I forbid it" is "veto."
Veto
"veto" is Latin for " I forbid" . The word does not actually appear in the US Constitution but has come to refer to the action of a President sending a bill back to Congress with his objections instead of signing it into law.
The Latin "veto" (first person singular form of the verb "vetare") means "I forbid," "I oppose," or "I prohibit." Our English word "veto" comes directly from this Latin verb.
veto; Latin for "I forbid it"Which originates from the Roman Tribune's ability to forbid a law from passinghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veto
in latin it means i forbid.
veto
The literal English translation of the word "veto" is "I forbid" or "I reject." It comes from Latin and is commonly used to indicate the power to reject or prohibit a decision or proposal.
veto
Veto