If this question asks the word origin (rather than the origin of the objects):
Merriam-Webster suggests:
;
: "Middle English alter, from Old English altar,from Latin altare; probably akin to Latin adolēre to burn up"
dont think there is a root word
The word altar is a noun. The plural form is altars.
alter
Fugitive has no root word it is the root word.
There is no root word of river. It itself is a root word.
the root word is'confirminglyishness'
The word that sounds the same as altar is "alter."
The Latin word for a pagan altar is ara. Most altars were pagan in Roman times.
The word altar is a noun. The plural form is altars.
God's altar is a holy place. That is one way to use altar in a paragraph.
alter
The verb 'alter' (meaning to change) is a homophone of 'altar'.
In the King James version the word - altar - appears 378 times the word - altars - appears 55 times
ΕΣΤΙΑ. Its meaning is: FOCUS (Spanish: FUOCO, its Greek root-word is: ΟΙΚΟΣ). ΟΙΚΟΣ stands for: The House. ΕΣΤΙΑ stands for "The House", too.
Fugitive has no root word it is the root word.
There is no root word of river. It itself is a root word.
The homophones for the word "alter" are "altar" and "alter."
the root word is'confirminglyishness'