it means across or through, such as in transportation.
I would like to extend that answer in a general manner. "Trans" can also have the connotation of sending.....such as transmission, transport........, but how about "transparent"? Food for thought.
It is a Latin prefix meaning 'across or beyond'
There are two roots 'trans' meaning across and 'port' meaning carry.
trans = across port = carry tion = noun
The root word trans- means across
intro means within. It actually comes originally from Latin "In" + "trans" meaning across. It is different from "inter" which means between.
No, there is not a latin root meaning for fog.
The Latin root word that means to send across is "trans-", which comes from the Latin word "trans" meaning "across" or "beyond".
The root word of "transparent" is "transparens," which comes from the Latin words "trans" meaning "through" and "parere" meaning "to show."
The root "trans" means across or beyond. It is commonly used in English words such as transport, transition, and translate.
Its meaning is akin to across, beyond, through, or any other word of that sort.
There are two roots 'trans' meaning across and 'port' meaning carry.
"Trans" is a prefix rather than a base or root word. It is used at the beginning of a word to indicate across, beyond, or through.
trans = across port = carry tion = noun
trans
The root word trans- means across
transfer
Trans-mit (verb)cause (something) to pass on from one place or person to another.Originating from late Middle English. From the Latin word transmittere, with the Latin roots trans, meaning across, and mittere, meaning send.Helps us understand the meaning that transmit, would be to send something across.
intro means within. It actually comes originally from Latin "In" + "trans" meaning across. It is different from "inter" which means between.