You don't catch me that easily. Inertia, of course, is the Latin word for idleness.
Inertia comes from the Latin word iners, which means idle or lazy.
It ultimately comes from Greek, the word genesismeaning 'birth'.
The word is in Greek. That is what the word "MYTH" comes from.
The Greek "stadion" (racecourse, unit of distance) is the root of the word "stadium".
The word Pentateuch comes from Church Latin pentateuchus, which in turn comes from Greek penta- + teukhos tool (in Late Greek: scroll)
Inertia comes from the Latin word iners, which means idle or lazy.
It comes from the Greek word Thronos, meaning High Seat
The word "mechanic" comes from the Greek word "mēkhanikos," which means "pertaining to machines."
The word Exodus is Latin and comes almost directly from Greek. The Greek word is exodos and comes from two other Greek words: ex 'out of' and hodos'way'
Salvation comes from the Greek word soteria.
The word "hedron" comes from the Greek language. It is derived from the Greek word "hedra," meaning seat or base.
The word "vapor" in English comes from the Greek word "ἀτμός" (atmós), meaning "steam" or "mist."
The English word that comes from the Greek word "grapho" is "telegraph."
Fantastic comes from a greek word. Φανταστικός [read as fantasticos] is the greek word.
"Primus" is not a greek word, it is latin. The correspodent word in Greek is "πρώτος" (protos).
The Greek word for wind is "anemos." The word comes from the Greek wind gods, the Anemoi.
I'm not sure about few, but one is mono. This word does come from the Greek.