The root word for the word "migrate" is "migrare," which comes from Latin meaning "to move from one place to another."
The Latin root word for "emigrated" is "migrare," which means "to move from one place to another."
The suffix of the word "migrate" is "-ate".
The Latin word "migro, migrare, migravi, migratum" means "to remove, depart, migrate, transport, move, violate." There also exists compounds of this word in Latin, including "immigro" (to go into), "admigro" (to go to, to be add to), "transmigro" (to transmigrate, to be colonized), "commigro" (to go somewhere with all one's stuff), "emigro" (to move out), "demigro" (to depart), and "remigro" (to return). Cognates might include Greek "αμειβω" (αμοιβος, αμοιβη) which means "to change." I have given you the for parts of the main root word "migro." The others are declined in the same way (cf. English's three parts, sing, sang, sung).
The word "migrate" has a short vowel sound. The "i" in migrate is pronounced as /ɪ/, a short vowel sound.
The root word of "unusual" is "usual."
I believe it is migrate.
Immigrate is first attested in the 1620s, from Latin immigratum, past participle of imigrare "to remove, go into, move in," from in- "in" + migrare "to move"Immigrant, from -ant; 'one who shall'
The root word migra means to wander. Some examples of this root word include migrate, emigrant, and immigrate. The word you provided does not exist as a proper prefix, root word, or suffix.
The Latin root word for "emigrated" is "migrare," which means "to move from one place to another."
The suffix of the word "migrate" is "-ate".
The Latin translation for the word migrate as a verb is migrare.
The Latin word "migro, migrare, migravi, migratum" means "to remove, depart, migrate, transport, move, violate." There also exists compounds of this word in Latin, including "immigro" (to go into), "admigro" (to go to, to be add to), "transmigro" (to transmigrate, to be colonized), "commigro" (to go somewhere with all one's stuff), "emigro" (to move out), "demigro" (to depart), and "remigro" (to return). Cognates might include Greek "αμειβω" (αμοιβος, αμοιβη) which means "to change." I have given you the for parts of the main root word "migro." The others are declined in the same way (cf. English's three parts, sing, sang, sung).
Fugitive has no root word it is the root word.
There is no root word of river. It itself is a root word.
The word "migrate" has a short vowel sound. The "i" in migrate is pronounced as /ɪ/, a short vowel sound.
the root word is'confirminglyishness'
The root word of "unusual" is "usual."