There are two different ways to say doctor depending on which one you need. The first is taakti which means a medical doctor. And the second is afatkuq which means a shaman, medicine man, or a witch doctor.
When you say "Latin for healer" I assume by "healer" you mean doctor. If that is true then the word for "doctor" is "medicus". You can see the word "medic" in that word, which hints Medicine or Medic. Hope I could help!
No, it is not. A healer is someone who heals (such as a doctor), and as a person would be a noun.
You have him heal people a lot, and then he becomes a trainee healer, and then a adept healer, and then a doctor.
healer = רופא (rofé')
An example of a quack doctor is the faith healer.
Healer is basically the same as doctor; although some wizards consider it offensive to even compare a healer with a doctor! Obviously, the "healers" use magic for their task.
An Egyptian wab is like a doctor or healer.
An albularyo is a Filipino faith healer, or witch doctor.
Manggagamot
curatio
what an east Indian doctor called
On a Kanji website, "healer" is read as "isha". So I suppose that's its meaning in Japanese.Source:http://www.kanjisymbol.net/mean/healer.HTMLA word "isha" means "a doctor" in Japanease and we do not call a doctor "healer" nowadays, since "healer" has something to do with spirituality and no license is required while a doctor must hold his/her license to provide his medical skills.I assumed that you meant the word "healer" such as reiki masters, and in the sense, I would use the word " reiki wo tsukau hito" (reiki user).There is another word used more in general, "iyashi(healing)-kei(traits)" 癒し系.This person's carachter, atmosphere, voice, appearance and etc. relaxs and heals you by practically doing nothing.Naoko Iijima is a good example of iyashi-kei when she appeared on Georgia coffee ads.Even though one iyashi-kei could be a healer to some people, yet he/she could be an annoyance to others at the same time.It is all up to the chemical or spirit match.いやす人iyasuhito