"Man" is of neither Greek nor Latin descent. It is Germanic and Norse in origin. The Latin for man is vir or homo; the Greek is Άνθρωπος (anthropos).
I am unfamiliar with a Greek root of "corp" but the Latin root refers to "body"Don't know if this is what is being looked for or not, but hope it helps!]It is a Latin word, not Greek, and it does mean body.So a corp is a body of men and corporal, an officer in command of that body. (AK)
The word "politics" is derived from the latin root "populo" meaning (in general) people. Politics, in latin basically means of the people, which is thought of with the word "democracy." Democracy was one of the early forms of government which only worked in small greek city states and other regions of latin territories such as Rome. It only worked in small areas because the "citizens" such as the adult men voted.
There is no suffix in the word menarche. It is a compound neo-Latin word having two Greek elements: men- for month; and arche for beginning.
men
Men.
The word originates in ancient Rome. It shares a common root with the latin word "senex" which means "old man" The implication being that the senate should be composed of old men.
The Greek root hustera refers to the womb, the female uterus, as it was thought to make women more emotional than men.
The word originates in ancient Rome. It shares a common root with the latin word "senex" which means "old man" The implication being that the senate should be composed of old men.
The root word 'men' typically refers to "mind" or "thought" in words like mental, mention, or mentality.
Anthropi.
The term was coined by NASA to refer to men traveling into space.It means "star traveler" / "star voyager" / "star sailor."The Latin root astron (from aster) means "star" and the root nautes means sailor, voyager.
Anthropology