Most of the English words that come from the Latin word for "night" are from what's known as the "oblique stem" noct-: nocturne, nocturnal, noctilucent. One that preserves the nominative form nox is equinox ("equal night").
The root word nox- means night. One example of this is equinox.
All I know is the word "noxious"
Incred is not a root word. It is a root with a negating prefix.
The root word means to stand. stigma is one word that has this root word.
able is the root in the word changeable
I guess that would be nocturnal.You are correct. The word nocturnal has a Latin root in it. Here it is broken down with some other common and medical terms using the same word root.-noct-, -nox- from L. nox, night and Nox, goddess of night, means "night". [nocturnal, lit. relating to the night, fig. moving about at night, equinox, lit. equal nights, fig. two days of the year when day and night are of equal length, nocturia, lit. night urine condition, noctambulism, lit. night wandering condition]
The root word is actually pens. This root word means to hang or weigh.
The root word nox- means night. One example of this is equinox.
The root word for "equinox" is Latin, with "aequus" meaning "equal" and "nox" meaning "night".
I know it's not exactly the same but: nocturnal. obnoxious.
The root word "luster" means shine or polish. It describes the quality of being shiny or glossy.
Incred is not a root word. It is a root with a negating prefix.
The root word means to stand. stigma is one word that has this root word.
growth the root word is physis
able is the root in the word changeable
The root word is actually pens. This root word means to hang or weigh.
There is no root word fine. The root word could be fin which means end.
The root word is lus. This root word means light.
I guess that would be nocturnal.You are correct. The word nocturnal has a Latin root in it. Here it is broken down with some other common and medical terms using the same word root.-noct-, -nox- from L. nox, night and Nox, goddess of night, means "night". [nocturnal, lit. relating to the night, fig. moving about at night, equinox, lit. equal nights, fig. two days of the year when day and night are of equal length, nocturia, lit. night urine condition, noctambulism, lit. night wandering condition]