Centennial: of or relating to a hundredth anniversary Centenarian:a person who is 100 or more years old
It means you should use the Latin word 'centum', which means "hundred". What you should use it for depends on who's asking and why.
Cent means percentile.
Centum, which is the root word for words in English like "cent", "century", and "centenary", means "a hundred"
"one hundred"
It's is a Latin word
it means hundred
it means one hunderd
tenous, retain, contain,
Triclinium is Latin for a dining room
The Latin word for 'counsel' is 'concilium'. One derivative in English from that original Latin word is conciliary. Another example of an English derivative is reconciliation.
Some are sedimentary, sedative, sedentary, sedan, and sediment
Some derivatives are aqueous, aquaduct, aquifer.
Some English derivatives of the Latin word "canis" are canine (relating to dogs), canid (referring to animals of the dog family), and caninity (quality of being like a dog).
The Latin word pulsat can mean "he, she or it pushes, strikes, beats, batters or assails"
The English equivalent of the Latin word 'ianua' is 'gate'. From the Latin word come two English words that have very different meanings and uses. One is the name of the first month of the year: January. Another is the name of an occupation: Janitor.
Some derivatives for the Latin word "multi" include "multiple", "multiply", and "multitude".
Cadence, cascade, casualty, decadence.
labor, laborer
Some English derivatives of 'ibi' are "ibid" and "ibidem," commonly used in academic writing to denote the same source. In French, the word "ici" is a derivative of 'ibi' and means 'here' rather than 'there.'