If you mean miss as in "I miss you", the 4 principle parts are:
present active: dēsīderō (I miss___)
present infinitive: dēsīderāre (To miss)
perfect active: dēsīderāvī (I missed ___)
supine: dēsīderātum (Noun, something that is . wished for.)
If you mean miss as in, not hitting a target:
Present active: requīrō
present infinitive: requīrere
perfect active: requīsīvī
supine: requīsītum
latin
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
The Latin root for "nine" is "novem."
what is the latin root for apparently
The Latin root for "people" is "populus."
The Latin root of Prefer is Praeferre.
The latin root for flexible is flex.
re is greek and latin
Francium has a Latin root. It is named after France, where it was discovered.
I honestly dont think there is a latin root for mind.... sorry :(
The Latin root of the word "destination" is "destinare," which means "to determine" or "to appoint."
No, there is not a latin root meaning for fog.