i believe its lingual
Eimi is the Greek equivalent of 'I am'. There are no infinitives in modern Greek. Esse is the Latin equivalent of 'to be'.***************"είναι" and "esse"
Pectus is the Latin equivalent of 'chest' in the sense of the body part. Its equivalent in Greek is thorax. Arca is the Latin equivalent of 'chest' in the sense of a box.
No, Greek is not based on Latin. Greek and Latin are two distinct languages with different origins, grammar, and vocabulary. While they share some similarities due to their interaction in ancient times, they are separate languages that developed independently.
Greek
Sub is Latin and means "under" (the Greek equivalent is hypo).
No, Greek is not a Latin-based language. Greek is an independent branch of the Indo-European language family, while Latin is part of the Italic branch of the same language family. However, Latin has influenced the vocabulary and grammar of modern Greek due to historical interactions between the two cultures.
Theia had no Roman/Latin equivalent.
The prefix "mono-" derives from the Greek language. The equivalent Latin prefix would be "uni-".
"Against" is the English equivalent of the Greek prefix "anti-." The preposition contra is the Latin equivalent. An English derivative of the Greek prefix is the noun "antagonist." An English derivative of the Latin equivalent is the adjective "contrary."
It's a Latin based language, but in the scientific vocabulary, most of the words are Greek or of Greek origin.
Scientific names are based on Latin and Greek. These languages are used because they are considered universal and do not change over time, ensuring consistency in the names of organisms across different languages and regions.
The word "anonymous" is of Greek origin. The Latin equivalent is ignotus