I think it is noun but I would have it checked
The syllable ind- is the Latin root for 'Indian'. From that root derives the noun 'India', as the name of the Southeast Asian country. From it also derives the noun 'Indus', as the word for an inhabitant of India.
The root word is the verb or noun "print" - originally from the Latin premere, (premo) to press.
Vertical is the adjective form of the English noun vertex, which comes from the Latin word vertex. The root word is vertere, meaning "to turn".
The Latin feminine noun meaning life is vita
Division or section is the English meaning of the Latin root 'temp-'. From this root come the Latin noun 'tempus' for time, and the English noun 'temperature'. The Latin nouns 'tempus' and 'templum', which means 'a section, a part cut off', are related to the Greek word 'temenos'. But only the Latin language, not the Greek, is the source for the root 'temp-'.
The syllable ind- is the Latin root for 'Indian'. From that root derives the noun 'India', as the name of the Southeast Asian country. From it also derives the noun 'Indus', as the word for an inhabitant of India.
The root word is the verb or noun "print" - originally from the Latin premere, (premo) to press.
The Latin root word for the English word 'manual' is manus. The Latin word is a feminine gender noun that's in the singular number. It means 'hand'.
The Latin root word for the English word 'manual' is manus. The Latin word is a feminine gender noun that's in the singular number. It means 'hand'.
Vertical is the adjective form of the English noun vertex, which comes from the Latin word vertex. The root word is vertere, meaning "to turn".
urbem is Latin for city, the root of the word is the noun urbs, city (ergo: the English word urban)
The Latin feminine noun meaning life is vita
The word factory is derived from the medieval Latin word factoria. It is also derived from the Latin word factor.
Division or section is the English meaning of the Latin root 'temp-'. From this root come the Latin noun 'tempus' for time, and the English noun 'temperature'. The Latin nouns 'tempus' and 'templum', which means 'a section, a part cut off', are related to the Greek word 'temenos'. But only the Latin language, not the Greek, is the source for the root 'temp-'.
Salus is the root word for 'salutations'. It's a feminine gender noun. The particular form that serves as the root is in the nominative singular, as the subject of a sentence.
The Latin root "acu-" indicates sharpness, from the verb acuare "to sharpen" and the noun acus "needle".
The word does not have a root word, it is a root word itself for the word intricacy, which is the noun form of the word. It may have Latin roots, and that may be the answer you're looking for is the Latin root it comes from. We get many English words from Latin.