The equivalent English word is grave as in burdened.
Gravity and grave
The English word "grave" comes from the Latin word "gravis," which means heavy or serious.
These '''ROOT'''-WORDS are '''GRAV''', GRAVI & GRAVITO meaning HEAVY & WEIGHTY. It comes from the '''Latin''' gravis which means HEAVY
Gravis.
"Gravis" is a Latin word meaning heavy. It can also mean weighty, serious, burdensome, important, severe, grievous, and unwholesome. It can also be written as grauis.
The Latin adjective meaning dignified is gravis.
The prefix "grav" typically means heavy or serious. It is derived from the Latin word "gravis," which also means heavy or weighty.
Non gravia. Example - It was not heavy to carry - non fuit gravis ad portandum EDIT: Non gravis = not heavy Levis = light (opposite of heavy)
The root word for gravity is "gravis," which is Latin for "heavy" or "weighty."
If you're talking about baro- as in "barometer", then it comes from the Greek βαρύς, meaning "heavy".
"Gravis" is an adjective from Latin, meaning HEAVY, SERIOUS, IMPORTANT. Some derivatives of it in English can be: - graveless; - gravid; - gravidity; - gravidly; - gravidness; - gravida (pl.: gravidas OR gravidae); - gravimeter; - gravimetric; - gravimetrically; - gravimetry; - gravitate / + d / +ing; - gravitation; - gravitational; - gravitationally; - gravitative; - graviton; - gravity; - gravy (pl.: gravies).
The word that comes from the Latin term meaning "I forbid it" is "veto."
The word "noxious" comes from the Latin word "noxa" meaning injury.