The ultimate origin of the word trachea is classical Greek tracheia, which passed into Latin as trachia. Both words refer to the windpipe.
The word factory is derived from the medieval Latin word factoria. It is also derived from the Latin word factor.
Morbid, derived from the Latin morbus (disease)
Ferrum is the Latin equivalent of 'iron'. It's the word from which the symbol for iron is derived. Its symbol is 'Fe', which is taken from the first two letters of the word in Latin.
Latin and the word it's derived from is bis source:Cambridge Latin Course Unit 1
its derived frm da latin word environ meanin "surroundings"
engineer is derived from the latin word: ingenium
no
The English adjective "insular" derived from the Latin word insula, meaning "island."
The English word "audience" is a word derived from Latin meaning those who hear
The plural of trachea is tracheae. As in "all humans have tracheae".
Latin word
virus is derived from latin virus that mean slimy, poisonous, or toxin.