Its a Latin masculine adjective meaning "first"
Primus,
prima,
primum.
Latin adjectives are gendered. Masculine, feminine, and neuter, which is determined by their endings. (us, a, um) This way, in a sentence there is always subject-verb agreement. Thus, masculine nouns take masculine adjectives, and so forth.
So to say I am the first student, I would have to write:
Sum prima
discipula
because the word for student, discipula,
is a feminine noun.
Like Latin nouns, adjectives decline in all 5 cases. Thus, the feminine form of prima
is:
(singular)
Prima
the first (whatever)
Primae
of the first
Primae
to/for the first
Primam
the first
Prima
by/with the first
(plural)
primae
primoram
primis
primos
primis
First.
Both Latin and Greek. The Latin the word is Aerius meaning 'airy' and from Greek Aerios meaning 'of the air'
It has no Greek meaning as it comes from a Latin word, organum, meaning instrument or tool.
It is Latin meaning bent.
It comes from a Latin word meaning "to build."
The word 'religion' comes from the Old English, through French, and originally, from the Latin. It has no Greek meaning. The Latin word has the meaning of "to bind."
Science (from the Latin scientia, meaning "knowledge") does not come from a greek word.
Greek, meaning seven
No, it comes from the Greek psyche, meaning mind, and logos, meaning explanation.
Counter and product meaning in greek and latin words
It is Greek meaning 7 sides and its Latin equivalent a septagon also meaning 7 sides
It's Latin, from the word pulcher meaning "beautiful".
The Latin root word for archaeology is "archaeo-", which comes from the Greek word "archaios" meaning "ancient" or "old."