"scop" or "scope"
Meaning: The basic meaning of "scope" is "see".Pronunciation: The "o" in scope is pronounced like the "o" in "no" or "slow". Example 1: Using a "telescope", we can see things that are far away, for example, stars in the night sky.
Example 2: In a laboratory, when a scientist wants to see very small things, he or she can use a "microscope".
Example 3: Doctors use a "stethoscope" to listen to what is happening inside a patient's body.
Other useful words:
microscopic - very small
periscope - a device used by a submarine to see above the water surface
horoscope - a way of "seeing" into your future by "reading" the stars
to scope out - to look at some thing or some place in advance, to see if it is okay
kaleidoscope - a device that allows you to see many colors mixed together
Greek: dino means "whirling." This is not, however, the source of the "dino" in "dinosaur"; that comes from Greek deinos, "terrible".
Syn is Greek.
I think it is a Latin root (not sure, but I think it is). it means together (just like sym, con, and com)
The root uni is derived from the latin language and means one. Some examples of words with the root uni are union, unicycle unicorn etc.
latin
greek
latin
One or singular
The root "Struct" is Latin in origin. It comes from the Latin word "structura," meaning "a building or structure."
re is greek and latin
uni (latin) mono (greek) both of them mean one
Its a greek root
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
latin
The prefix "mono-" derives from the Greek language. The equivalent Latin prefix would be "uni-".
flimsy is it greek or latin
There is no Greek root vit-. It is a Latin root.
The word "string" has its roots in both Latin and Old English. In Latin, "stringere" means to bind or draw tight, which led to the development of the word "string" in English.
Latin.