Nasturtium
Nasturtium
Nasturtium
Neither. Tornado and twister are two words for the same thing.
"Syn-" means "with , together." It is only found in Greek loanwords or words that have Latin and Greek elements mixed together. The native Latin word that means "with, together" is "con- (co-,com-, col, etc)" and gives us English words like "congregation (a flocking together)."
Galanthus is the Latin for the English flower named "snowdrop."Specifically, the word functions as the binomial ("two-name"), botanical, Latin, scientific, or taxonomic name for a plant. It originates in the combination of the Greek words gála ("milk") and ánthos("flower"). The pronunciation will be "guh-LEN-thuhss" in Anglicized Latin.
There is none; twister and tornado are two words for the same thing. Tornado is the preferred scientific term.
There is none; twister and tornado are two words for the same thing. Tornado is the preferred scientific term.
It's garbage - Latin words, but not inflected properly. Looks like someone took words from an English>Latin dictionary and put them together. Doesn't work that way.
Twister and tornado are two words for the exact same thing. A tornado is considered such when the violent winds reach the ground.
The Latin prefix "sym" means together or with. It is used in English words like symphony (sounding together) and symmetrical (having balanced proportions).
No, a tongue twister does not have to have real words. Tongue twisters can be made up of nonsensical or made-up words, as long as they are challenging to say quickly and repetitively.
The cost of the sausages is not explicitly mentioned in the French tongue twister. The focus of the tongue twister is on the difficult pronunciation of the words rather than a specific story or scenario.