The Latin word verb, "verbum"
The word "perfect" comes from the Latin verb perficio.
"Question" comes from the Latin word quaestio, which is from the verb quaerere "to seek".
No, it comes from the Latin verb, addicere.
Donate is an English derivative of the Latin for 'to give'. The original Latin verb is 'donare'. The Latin verb literally means 'to give as a present'.
TRUE
The English word 'menace' is unrelated to the Latin word 'minere'. For the English word refers to a threat, and the Latin verb refers to being suspended, overhanging, or projecting. But the word is related to the Latin verb minari, which literally means 'to jut out' or 'to project'. But it also can mean 'to menace' or 'to threaten'. And that verb comes into the English language by way of the French word 'menace'.
It comes from the Latin pavors/paors of the verb pavorem = be afraid of
The word "script" comes from the Latin verb "scribere" meaning "to write."
It comes from the combination of the prefix pro- which means "for", and the Latin verb specio, specere which means "to look".
The Latin "veto" (first person singular form of the verb "vetare") means "I forbid," "I oppose," or "I prohibit." Our English word "veto" comes directly from this Latin verb.
It's not a word in Latin. However, the English word "opt" comes from the Latin verb "optare" (pronounced 'op-TAH-reh'), which means "to choose," "to wish."
It comes from the Middle French word "stupide" which came from the Latin word "stupidus" which figuratively means "amazed, confounded" but literally means "struck senseless." The Latin word is a form of the Latin verb "stupere" meaning "to be amazed" (which is where "stupendous" comes from)