The point at which something comes into existence or from which it derives or is derived.
By: Jorge Alcocer
"Manu"'; Meaning hand.
The root word for maneuver is the Latin word "manu," which means hand, and French word "œuvre," meaning work.
The root word "domin" means master.
manuscript
Certainly, please provide the root word and its definition so that I can offer you an appropriate prefix.
to be stupid
health
one who
It means angle.
A lord, Master
Man, as in male person, comes neither from Greek nor Latin, It has a Germanic root. Manu is more difficult without a context. There is an oceanic word manu which means bird. Manu is also a Hindi word for the first man, and derives from Sanskrit. (The Germanic languages and Sanskrit both derive from Indo-European). Manu, as short for Manuel is a Spanish/Portuguese name deriving from Latin and late Greek, but of course there are other similar names such as the Hebrew Emmanuel. The many English words beginning with manu- such as manual, derive from the Latin manus, meaning hand.
The root word "alti" comes from the Latin word "altus," which means "high" or "deep." It is often used in English to denote something located at a high level or altitude, such as "altitude" or "altimeter."