fluo *is* a root word, if I'm not mistaken.
The Latin root of fluere is "flu-" which means "to flow". This root is commonly found in words related to flowing or movement, such as fluctuate and influence.
The root word of influx is "fluere," which is Latin for "to flow."
The English word for fluere is "flow."
The root "Struct" is Latin in origin. It comes from the Latin word "structura," meaning "a building or structure."
The Latin root for "nine" is "novem."
The Latin root for "people" is "populus."
It was not named after anybody. The word "flute" comes from the Latin root "fluere", meaning "to flow".
To flow.
Fluorine (:
Fluere - to flow
fluorine got its name from the latin word fluere, which means flow.
"Confluence" is from the Latin prefix con- ("together") and verb fluere, "to flow".
To flow.
(Latin: flow, flowing; moving in a continuous and smooth way; wave, moving back and forth) Dean Cook (www.paranormalsceneinvestigators.co.uk)
ρευστό [refsto] = fluidυγρό [eegro] = liquidfluid < (Latin) fluere < (Greek) φλύω/φλέω = to swell (like a wave) >> fluctuation
The root "Struct" is Latin in origin. It comes from the Latin word "structura," meaning "a building or structure."
latin
The latin root for flexible is flex.