Quae sunt omnes Latinae radices et exempla is the Latin equivalent of 'What are all the Latin roots and examples'.
In the word by word translation, the feminine gender interrogative pronoun 'quae', in the nominative plural, means 'what'. The verb 'sunt', in the third person plural of the present indicative of the infinitive 'esse', means '[they] are'. The feminine gender adjective 'omnes',* in the nominative plural, means 'all'. The feminine gender adjective 'Latinae', in the nominative plural, means 'Latin'. The feminine gender noun 'radices', in the nominative plural, means 'roots'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The neuter gender noun 'exemplo', in the nominative plural, means 'examples'.
*When an adjective in Latin modifies two nouns at the same time, and the two nouns are of different genders, the gender of the adjective generally agrees with whichever noun is closest to it in the sentence.
"Path" means feel - from the latin roots. Some examples are "telepathy", or "pathetic"
Languages that have their roots in Latin include French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages are part of the Romance language family, which evolved from Vulgar Latin.
English words with Latin roots are often similar to their Latin roots, but not always exactly the same. Examples: Causa - Cause, or reason Nauta - sailor (as in "nautical") Mater - mother (as in "maternal") Pello - I drive out (as in "repel") Vivo - I live (as in "vital")
Examples of romantic languages include Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian. These languages have roots in Latin and are commonly spoken in Europe and Latin America.
the examples of aerial roots is mangroove tree
It means law or justice. Some examples are: judge, judicator, and jusgentium.
Certainly not all words come from Latin as English is the thief of ALL languages, borrowing with NO intention of ever returning! Check out the Proto-Indo-European roots, Mongol roots, Slavic roots, Arabic roots (our numerals are no longer Roman, they are Arabic!), Scandinavian roots (Smorgasbord), etcetera, etcetera, ad infinitum, ad nauseum. Oops! -There's MORE Latin! :) But the short answer is that Latin was more widespread earlier than English in the history of the known world.
examples of plants with modified roots.....
Muskogean is a family of American Indian languages. They have no Greek or Latin roots.
Latin was one of the first languages. Many other languages have Latin roots. And Not all the elements have Latin names. Some are named after famous people and scientist. Such as Einsteinium.
Formido [Latin] I dread
Some examples of words with the root "celer" are accelerate, decelerate, and celerity. These words all relate to speed or quickness.