civism
civisms
civis
Citizen.
Civis is the Latin word for citizen. For Romans, the word incorporated all the honors, rights and duties of a Roman citizen.
city (civis)
The following are Latin words from which "civilization" gets its roots: civicus,-a,-um (civil), civilis, civilis, civile (civil), civiliter [adverb] (in a civil manner), civis, civis (citizen), civitas, civitatis (citizinship or right to be a citizen of a certain state).
The Latin word 'ebrius' (roughly) translates into the English word 'inebriated'
"Together" and "with" are meanings of the Latin prefix con-. The prefix in question links etymologically to the preposition cum ("with"). The pronunciation will be "kon" in Church and secular Latin.
The Latin prefix of the English word "postpone" is "post-", which means after or later.
The English word novice derives from the Latin word novus, meaning 'new'.
The origin of city is Middle English, from French cite, from Latin civitas, from civis 'citizen.' This word originally denoted a town, and was often used as a Latin equivalent to Old English burh 'borough,' the term was later applied to foreign and ancient cities and to the more important English boroughs.
"Against" is the English equivalent of the Greek prefix "anti-." The preposition contra is the Latin equivalent. An English derivative of the Greek prefix is the noun "antagonist." An English derivative of the Latin equivalent is the adjective "contrary."
"Infinity" is an English word, ultimately descended from the Latin word "infinitas", composed from the prefix "in-" ("not"), the root "finis" ("end"), and the suffix "-tas" ("-ness").
What do you mean the prefix? The word "crevice" is one word, it comes from Middle English, from Old French crevace, probably from Vulgar Latin *crepācia, from *crepa, from Latin crepāre, to crack.] R3.