Mittet is the 3rd person future active indicative tense of mitto, or I send. Mittet means he/she/it will send.
Actually, 63% of all English words come from Latin.
second
feline.
It comes from the Latin word Germania. Many English words come from Latin.
The English words "decimate" and "decimal" come from the Latin word "decimus", which means "tenth."
nazi-latin
Many English words came from Latin like many other languages use older languages for their own. Much of English that comes from Latin comes from French, which even older than English, and heavily based on Latin.
Yes, it's possible that Latin has a larger vocabulary than Greek. One reason is the borrowing of many words from the classical language of the ancient Greeks. But just for the record, the borrowing isn't one way. For example, the modern Greek names for the months of the year come from classical Latin.
"conspicuous"
Italian, French and Spanish are the only ones I know of. There are also English words with Latin origins but the English language does not come from Latin. Also Portuguese and Romanian.
Many English words come from this stem. Among them are mission, commit, remittance, submission, omission.
Canis means 'dog' in Latin. In English, the words 'canine' and 'kennel' come from 'canis'.