From the Latin habilis, 'easy to handle', itself derived from habere 'to handle'. And for those who think Nike had an original idea, also the root of the imperative injunction Habet! (just...HANDLE it!!!)
Other than "in" being a Latin derivative, no.
It is Latin
The English derivative for the Latin word "vita" is "vital."
The installation engineers job was to habilitate the workshop with all the equipment needed to manufacture the product.
English baby most likely comes from the latin babae, meaning joy the latin word for baby is infans
Janitor.
Ger- is the Latin root of 'gerund'. A Latin derivative of the Latin root syllable is the infinitive 'gerere', which means 'to carry about'. An English derivative, by way of the preceding Latin derivative, is the noun 'gerund'.
It means 'friendly' or 'friend' in Latin.
The Latin word for 'counsel' is 'concilium'. One derivative in English from that original Latin word is conciliary. Another example of an English derivative is reconciliation.
Latin. from pater=father.
nomen.... derivative nomenclature
better