The Latin word for plutonium is also plutonium.
The Greek word for plutonium is Î?λουτωνιο.
The word "neurotoxin" comes from the Latin words neuron(nerve) and toxicum (poison). The Latin words come from the Greek words neuro (cord) and toxikon pharmakon (arrow poison).
There are not any Roman words, Romans spoke a variety of different languages but the most dominant dialects were Latin and Greek. The Latin word for knowledge is 'conscienta' and in Greek is 'gnosis'.
octopi Octopi is not incorrect, but is not technically correct either. Octopi is Latin and is the correct plural of Octopus, but the word octopus is not Latin. It is a Greek word. And the correct plural of octopus in Greek is "octopedes". Now the real kicker is that even though it's a Greek word, any word that is used in the English language is now an English word. So the Greek or Latin plural is technically incorrect. The official, proper pronunciation is -- octopuses. Source: Merriam-Webster
The word danger comes from the Latin word "danjare," which means "to be able." However, the concept of danger has likely been present in human societies long before the Latin language existed. So while the word itself comes from Latin, the idea of danger is universal and not specific to any particular language or culture.
The word "terrible" does not originate from any Latin terms. The Latin term for one may be looking for is the Latin word "atrox." This word is the Latin for terrible, horror, and cruel.
Prodromal is a noun and means any symptom that signals the impending onset of a disease. It came via French from the New Latin word prodromus and from the Greek word prodromos.
The idea that "rhubarb" has any meaning such as you state is entirely false (although widely reported). The Latin word for "root" is radix, from which the modern word radish comes.In fact the name rhubarb comes from the classical Greek term rheo, meaning "to flow", referring to its laxative properties, plus Greek barbaros meaning foreign.
No, "aud" is not Latin. "Aud" does not correspond to any Latin word.
it comes from the latin root -carbo meaning coal. fun fact carbon makes the most things than any other element in the periodic table
The word "fatigue" is derived from the Latin word "Fatigatio," which has the same meaning.
The Latin word for any cosmetic is medicamen.
In latin, there actually isn't any articles so...