For birth I'm pretty sure its Ortus.Which is more like "origin" or "source" of birth.
Life is "Vita"
"New life" in Latin is vita nova.
"Vit-" or "vita-" coming from the Latin word for life, "vita."
The Latin word that means before birth is nativitatem.
"Life" in Latin is vita.
The word birth is an English word taken from the Old Norse word byrth meaning to bear.
prental
The word is antenatal.
Before birth is an English equivalent of 'ante natal'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'ante' means 'before'. The adjective 'natalis' means 'of or relating to birth'. Over time, the Latin ablative case ending '-is' was dropped. So the phrase came to be known as 'ante natal'.
medio día(:
Prenatal comes from Latin prae- "before" and natalis "having to do with birth".
The word "nativity" has Latin roots in the word "natal" which means, from birth. The Nativity scene is the scene focusing on the birth of Jesus Christ.
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'].
Ante is the Latin word for before and delictum is Latin for offense. The phrase ante delictum means before the offense.
The Latin translation of the English phrase 'good birth' is the following: nobili genere. The word 'nobili' means 'known'; and by extension 'well-known, renowned and celebrated' and 'noble'. The word may be applied to horses, as 'highly bred', and to things as 'fine'. And the word 'genere' means 'birth, descent or origin'.
Species is a late Middle English word that comes from the Latin word species, which meant appearance. That word was rooted in the Latin specere, which meant to look.
An antecedent is a word or thing that is referred to in a following sentence. The word antecedent come from the Latin words 'ante' which means 'before' and 'cedo' which means 'fall'. The two Latin words together mean 'to fall before.'