The verb Audire - to hear, listen to, pay attention
'Mal-' is not usually found as a stem. More frequently, it is a prefix. It comes from Latin and means 'Bad'.
The Latin stem may be defined as the base in Latin from which a given word in Latin or in any other language is derived. For example, 'audi-' is the Latin stem to the Latin noun 'audientia', which means 'attention, hearing or listening'; the Latin verb 'audire', which means 'to hear or listen'; the Latin noun 'auditorium', which means a 'hall for listening'; and the Latin noun 'auditus', which means 'the sense of hearing'. It also is the stem to the English language words 'auditor' and 'auditorium'.
The stem is sept-.
The correct pronunciation of Audi (from Latin "audire" = to hear) is OW-DEE in both Latin and German.
The Latin stem for "scribe" is "scrib," which means to write.
The word 'Audi' comes from Latin.
Stipes would refer to a stem of an apple, etc...
The word Audi is based on a latin translation of the word "Horch." In Latin Audi means to hear or to listen. August Horch was the founder of Audi and the word "horch" in German translates to "hark."
math stem
Audi! is the command Listen! in English.
"Population" is a word with the Latin stem "pop," which comes from the Latin word "populus" meaning people or community.
Audi, Latin for to hear