paramecium from Greek παραμήκης + Latin suffix -umπαραμήκης [paramēkēs] = elongatedFrom prefix παρά- (over-) + μήκος [mēkos] (= length)So it means "over(pro)longed"
frat is a root in itself whether it is latin or greek i can't remeber, also i am not sure if it is a suffiz or a prefix but i am mostly sure it is a root. :33
Microlitre, where the u is a substitute for the Greek letter mu
Latin (omnivorus).
it comes from the greek prefix photo, a form of the greek word phos which means light, and sythesis from latin synthesis "collection, set, composition (of a medication)," from greek synthesis "composition," from syntithenai "put together, combine," from syn- "together" + tithenai "put, place," from base *dhe- "to put, to do".
The prefix 'nona' originates from Latin, where it means "nine." It is commonly used to indicate the ninth position in a series or to denote something that is not present or lacking.
I'm pretty sure it's LatinANSWER: Nona was one of the Parcae, the three personifications of destiny in Roman mythology (which came from the Moirai in Greek mythology).
The prefix "mono-" derives from the Greek language. The equivalent Latin prefix would be "uni-".
The prefix for nine is "nona-".
Greek.
The previous answer here was "greek". Unfortunately, this is incorrect; perhaps it was a guess? The correct answer is Latin; reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_and_Latin_roots_in_English .
Greek and Latin and Sanskrit.
Penta is of Greek origin.
The prefix "nov" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "novem," meaning nine.
If you mean the prefix "uni-" (unicellular, etc.), then it comes from the Latin word unus, meaning "one". (The nearly-equivalent prefix "mono-", however, comes from Greek.)
prefix meaning fast
Spect- is Latin for See or Look