Mit(t)- or mis(s)-, from mitto mittere misi missum.
The Latin root for "send" is "mittere."
mitto, mittere, misi, missus means to send
trans
The root word that means "to send" is "miss" from the Latin word "mittere". It is commonly found in words such as "mission" or "dismiss".
The Latin word "to send" is mittere. Two forms of this word have provided roots for English words, the present stem mitt- (as in "transmit" and "intermittent") and the participle stem miss- (as in "transmission" and "intermission").
The suffix "mit" is from a Latin root. It comes from the Latin word "mittere," meaning "to send."
send
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mitto, mittere, misi, missus means to send
trans
The *Latin* root (Greek is a separate language, they are not the same) for this compound word is: ex (out of) and mitto (to send)
The root of the word "missionary" is "mission," which comes from the Latin word "missio," meaning "sending." The root of the word "missile" is also "missio," which refers to something that is sent or thrown, like a projectile.
To recommit; to send back., The act of remanding; the order for recommitment.
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
latin
This latin root, miss and mit means to send something. Such as the word transmit, dismiss, admit, and so much more.
what is the latin root for apparently
The Latin root of Prefer is Praeferre.