to many to count
Muskogean is a family of American Indian languages. They have no Greek or Latin roots.
No. Etymology is the study of the origin of words but many have roots that are Greek, Latin. Old English, French and Hebrew.
Formido [Latin] I dread
No, Spanish roots are primarily Latin, and Latin come from Greek.
The Greek root for "white" is "leukos" and the Latin root for "lion" is "leo." Therefore, the Greek and Latin roots for "white lion" would be something like "leukoleo."
It's English. But it has Latin roots.
logos
It is both Greek and Latin. Go to www.kent.k12.wa.us/ksd/MA/resources/greek_and_latin_roots/transition.html for more Greek and Latin roots
Yes, Latin roots can be combined with Greek prefixes to create new words. This is a common practice in English and in the formation of scientific and technical terms.
Greek roots are the simple elements out of which Greek words are formed. Likewise, Latin roots are the simple elements out of which Latin words are formed. In Latin, the phrase 'definition of Greek and Latin roots' is 'definitio radicum graecarum latinarumque'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'definitio' means 'definition'. The noun 'radicum' means 'roots'. The adjective 'graecarum' means 'Greek'. The noun 'latinarum' means 'Latin'. And the enclitic 'que' means 'and'.
what is the greek roots word for children or offspring
sometimes, but no always, greek and latin roots.