Bell is not a Greek root. It's Germanic in origin (and possibly Dutch). It means "bell."
Bell-us is not a root word. It is the masculine singular nominative of the adjective bellus -a -um meaning handsome or pretty. There are two Latin roots bell-. One, from the IE root *deu-, means handsome. The other, from duellum, an older word of obscure origin, means war.
They have root beer available
Belli is the genitive singular of the word bellum, meaning "war." In English it occurs most frequently in the phrase casus belli, meaning "an occasion for [literally 'of'] war."
If you mean "bell" as in bellicose, or belligerent, it comes from the Latin "bellum", which means "war". Ante-bellum means pre-war, or before the war.
The English adjectives belligerent and bellicosederive from the Latin root syllable 'bell-'. The syllable also may be seen in Latin derivatives. For example, the derivative noun bellum means 'war'. The derivative adjectives belliger, bellatorius, and bellatorrespectively mean 'waging war', 'warlike', and 'warrior'.
Bell-us is not a root word. It is the masculine singular nominative of the adjective bellus -a -um meaning handsome or pretty. There are two Latin roots bell-. One, from the IE root *deu-, means handsome. The other, from duellum, an older word of obscure origin, means war.
it is not a greek root or any root
sqrt(324) = ±1818the square root is 18
There is no root in "ponder"
the root civilis
The suffix bell means war! :D
A bell is set off probably