Germano-, Teuto-
"Together" and "with" are meanings of the Latin prefix con-. The prefix in question links etymologically to the preposition cum ("with"). The pronunciation will be "kon" in Church and secular Latin.
The prefix "nov" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "novem," meaning nine.
The Latin prefix for "before" is "pre", smart guy.
The Latin prefix for five is "quinqu-."
The prefix "mono-" derives from the Greek language. The equivalent Latin prefix would be "uni-".
A Latin prefix is how a word starts but usually a group of 3-4 letters. But the group of letters is from Latin.
The Latin prefix meaning a billion multiples is "giga".
No. The prefix is 'con-'
It is actually a germanic prefix.
Appropriate does not have a prefix. The Latin origins of the word do make use of Latin prefix however. The word "appropriate" comes from Late Latin appropriatus, past participle of appropriare, from Latin ad- + propriusown.Words such as Misappropriate use the word appropriate as a root word and add a prefix to it. In the case of misappropriate, the prefix would be mis-.The related word expropriate drops the a and adds ex-. This is not really an example of a prefix added to the word appropriate, but rather a word coming from the same Latin origins. Expropriate comes from Medieval Latin expropriatus, past participle of expropriare, from Latin ex- + propriusown. As you can see, expropriate comes from a Latin word where a LATIN prefix was added to the same LATIN root word proprius.
The prefix "ante" comes from Latin. It means "before" or "prior to."