Assuming you mean cred- as in incredible, credibility, etc., it comes from the Latin word credere (to believe).
The Latin root of "training" is traho, meaning to drag.
'color' itself is the Latin root, 'Chrom' is the greek root
It means time, chrono (χρονο). It's Greek.
it is the meaning of to hear
Pulse has no root word. It is from the Latin pulsus which is from Latin pellere (to set in motion by beating or striking) and the suffix -tus (the suffix for action verbs).
belief
The root "cred" comes from the verb "credere" which means "to believe, trust."
The syllable 'cred-' is the root of 'credo'. The verb 'credo' is the first person singular form of the present indicative. It means 'I believe'. Its form in the infinitive is 'credere'.
To believeSome examples of words using this root are:creed: something you believe inincredible: unbelievableincredulous: Not believing is something; skepticalcredible: believable
re is greek and latin
Francium has a Latin root. It is named after France, where it was discovered.
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
The Latin root that means believe is cred.Some words that include this root are credere "believe", credit "believes", credo "I believe", credidi "I believed", and creditum "loan", which arises from the idea that the person who is loaning the money believes in the recipient's ability to repay it. In English, the recipient is said to have credibility.
There is no Greek root vit-. It is a Latin root.