Frenzy is the English derivative of the words for 'excited behavior' in the ancient classical and the even older classical Greek languages. In Latin, the word is 'phreneticus'. In Greek, the word is 'phrenetikos'.
The English word proscenium derives from the Greek word proskenion. It is a term that refers to a theater where actors perform in an arch.
It is a Greek word from which the English term <i>substance</i> derives.
The English word proscenium derives from the Greek word proskenion. It is a term that refers to a theater where actors perform in an arch.
The English word theatre is derived from the Greek word theatron. A theatre can be used to display films, plays, or concerts.
Symphony OR orchestra, they both derive from the Greek language.
Neither - the word population is English, but it derives from Latin populus, meaning "the people"
You probably mean the English word termination -logy, which is not a word on its own. It derives from Greek logos, a word, discourse or discussion.
sometime in the 1850, meaning rule by the wealthy. It derives from the Greek word Ploutokratia
Vit- is not Greek but Latin. It derives from the Latin word vita, meaning life. Hence the English words vitality, vital, vitamin
Yes we get it from the Greek word Mathematica.
Patriotic derives from the Greek word patriotikoswhich derives from the word patris (=fatherland). The noun for the word patriotic in Greek is patriotismos, in English patriotism.by Sotiris (Greek)
Archaios is not an English word, it is Greek. Here is what the Related Link (below) has to say about it: "Our word 'archaic' derives from the Greek archaios, meaning simply 'old' or 'ancient.'"