Greek "sphaira" = ball.Latin "sphaera" and then "sphera" Old French "espere" Middle English "sphere".
It comes from the Greek word sphaira - meaning 'globe' or 'ball'
The word "sphere" comes from the Latin word "sphaera," which in turn originated from the Greek word "sphaira," meaning "ball" or "globe."
A hydrosphere (from Greek ὕδωρ - hydor, "water" and σφαῖρα - sphaira, "sphere") in physical geography describes the combined mass of water found on, under, and over the surface of a planet SHAMBHAVI
Vera Panagio tidou Korphio te has written: 'An aplo so te sphaira te s psyche s mou m'oles tis ptycho seis te s.'
The hydrosphere (from Greek ὕδωρ - hudōr, "water"[1] and σφαῖρα - sphaira, "sphere"[2]) in physical geography describes the combined mass of water found on, under, and over the surface of a planet.The lithosphere (Ancient Greek: λίθος [lithos] for "rocky", and σφαῖρα [sphaira] for "sphere") is the rigid[1]outermost shell of a rocky planet. On Earth, it comprises the crust and the portion of the upper mantle that behaves elastically on time scales of thousands of years or greater.
None, they are both Greek. "Lithos" (spelled lambda, iota with acute, theta, omicron, sigma) means stone, and "sphaira" (spelled sigma, phi, alpha, iota with circumflex, rho, alpha) means ball. Although the latter was actually in use in latin as a loanword "sphaera".
The English language noun 'sphere' comes from the older, classical Greek word sphaira by way of the later, classical Latin language of the ancient Romans. The root syllable sphaer- finds its Latin derivatives in 'sphaera' for 'globe, sphere'; 'sphaeristerium for 'place for playing ball games'; and 'sphaeromachia' for 'boxing with iron balls strapped to the boxers' hands'.
It originates from Greek atmos meaning 'vapour' and sphaira meaning 'ball or globe'. The Earth's atmosphere is a thin layer of gases that surrounds the Earth. It composed of 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 0.9% argon, 0.03% carbon dioxide, and trace amounts of other gases. Because that is what the layer of gases that surround an astronomical body are called.
Which Version? The US call American football-football and association football-soccer.In the UK we call association football-football,Rugby football-Rugby and American football a girl's game because of all the padding they wear!
There is no layer of the lithosphere as described in the question. The lithosphere consists of the crust and the uppermost brittle rock of the mantle and forms the massive segments of rock that cover the surface of Earth which are called tectonic plates.
hemisphere |ˈheməˌsfi(ə)r| noun a half of a sphere. • a half of the earth, usually as divided into northern and southern halves by the equator, or into western and eastern halves by an imaginary line passing through the poles. • a half of the celestial sphere. • (also cerebral hemisphere) each of the two parts of the cerebrum (left and right) in the brain of a vertebrate. DERIVATIVES hemispheric |ˌheməˈsfi(ə)rik; -ˈsferik| |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɪrɪk| |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɛrɪk| |-ˈsfɛrɪk| adjective hemispherical |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɪr1kəl| |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɛrəkəl| |-ˈsfɛrɪk(ə)l| adjective hemispherically |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɪr1k(ə)li| |ˈˈhɛməˈˈsfɛrək(ə)li| adverb ORIGIN late Middle English (in the sense [half the celestial sphere, the sky] ): from Old French emisphere, via Latin from Greek hēmisphairion, from hēmi- 'half' + sphaira 'sphere.'