audio, audire, audivi, auditus
can we like have an exact word 0-0
maybe like auditorium
I think .....
r
The word is "audience." It comes from the Latin word "audire," which means "to hear."
Origin from latin; specifically, late latin. meaning: hear; to hear; listen
the answer is audience an audible
auditoryauditaudio
The root word of "auditorium" is "audire," which is Latin for "to hear." The word "auditorium" originally referred to a place where people could listen or hear performances, lectures, or presentations.
The word "audible" comes from the Latin word "audire," which means "to hear" or "to listen." It entered the English language in the early 17th century, derived from the Latin phrase "audibilis," meaning "able to be heard."
it is the meaning of to hear
it means to hear, listen
The root aud comes from the Latin word audire -to hear, listen.
Aud- is the root syllable of the infinitive 'audire'. It means to hear. That also is the meaning of the infinitive.
The stem is audio meaning hear. Another stem would be the infinitive of audio which is audiere, meaning to hear
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.