Rex regis, meaning king, and cado cadere cecidi casum, meaning die.
Regicide means to kill a king.---These words typically derive from Latin roots. The Latin for prince is princeps which suggests that a word for killing a prince or for the person that kills a prince could be, say, 'princepicide'. However, google searches for this yield no results, suggesting that there is no usage of it other than the one that declares that it should be a word.
The man committed regicide.
"Calorie" is not a Latin word, though it has Latin roots: it is from the word calor, meaning "heat."
The Latin word for 'roots' is the noun radices. The noun is feminine gender, in the plural form. The singular form is 'radix'.
It's English. But it has Latin roots.
The word "classic" has roots in the Latin language. It is derived from the Latin word "classicus," which originally referred to the highest class of Roman citizens. Over time, it came to signify something of the highest quality or timeless excellence.
A murderer; traitor; assassin; treason
The Latin root is 'pondus' meaning to weigh
Regicide is developed from two Latin base words: essentially regal or royal, and -cide, to kill. Regicidemeans killing a monarch.
milli
The word "medium" has Latin etymological roots. The word comes from the Latin word "medius" which meant intermediate or middle.
regicide