In classical Latin, the verb "I go before" or "I precede" is praeeo or antecedo
one of the Latin words for "before" is ante
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
The word has two parts: pre-- meaning before and position meaning place or location. The Latin for the entire word is praepositin.
Before.
Ire.
ire
Compare may be what the abbreviation 'cp' means before the word 'liber'. The word 'liber' is Latin for book. The Latin abbreviation for 'compare' is 'cf', which is an abbreviation for the verb 'confer' ['to compare'].
Before.
Yes, it is. It's composed of "prae" (before, in front of) and "fixere" (if you want so... to fix)... so a prefix is something you put before a word...
No, 'to go' isn't the English equivalent of 'hordes'. The word 'hordes' isn't a word in the Latin vocabulary. A Latin word that somewhat resembles it is the neuter gender noun 'hordeum', which means 'barley'. The Latin word for 'hordes' is 'catervae'.
English words of Latin origin: antecedent, predecessor.
For birth I'm pretty sure its Ortus.Which is more like "origin" or "source" of birth. Life is "Vita"