It doesnt exist
Pulchri- meaning beautiful, and tube meaning television, thus " nice looking TV" Hah. hah
The root of the word "television" comes from combining "tele," which means "far," with "vision," which refers to seeing. So, "television" essentially means "seeing from a distance."
it is greek, actually. it means "distant."
Television is a hybrid compound, combining the Greek adverb tele "at a distance; far off" with the English word vision, which derives through French from the Latin verb video "to see."
The word 'media' comes from the Latin word 'medius' meaning 'middle'. It evolved to refer to a means of mass communication that reaches a large audience such as newspapers, television, and the internet.
Latin Lover - TV series - was created in 2001.
tele = somthing that is sent out using radio waves and vision = somthing that you see, which = television!! yay "tele" is from the Greek word for "distant", and has nothing to do with radio waves.
According to a single website I found on a web-search "Tele- is a Greek( ) prefix meaning "distant". It can be short for television or telephone." and another web-search reveled "The word television is derived from a mixture of Latin and Greek words meaning 'far sight' i.e. tele meaning far in Greek and visiomeaning sight in Latin."As to why it's supposedly a combination of Greek and Latin/English (vision not viso) words I still don't know (I'd check for a correlation between the language from the place where it originated and areas that primarily speak Latin and/or Greek/English, or just search for the answer why)
When you see the letters "aud" or "audi" at the beginning of a word, it refers to what you "hear." It comes from the Latin word for hearing. So, radio sound has often been described as "audio" because you listen to it and hear it; on the other hand, what you watch or look at on television is called "video," from the Latin word referring to what you see.
There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".There is no Latin word "journal". But if you mean the Latin word for journal, it is "ephemeris".
The word "tele" is Greek for "at a distance" or "to a distance," and the word "graph" is Greek for "to write," together translating as "to write at a distance." The word "television" uses the Latin word "visio," meaning "to see," along with the Greek word "tele," which together translates as "to see at a distance."
TV stands for Television. Tele is Greek for 'far', and the Latin word visio means 'sight'. Therefore, TV, or Televison, means 'far sight', as it allows you to see images not immediately in front of you.