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The Greek borrowed it from "An Asiatic language".
Yes, the word "catastrophic" does have its roots in Latin. It is derived from the Greek word "katastrophē," which means "an overturning or sudden turn." This word was later adapted into Latin as "catastropha," which eventually evolved into the English word "catastrophic."
The language of origin of xanthosis is Greek. It comes from the Greek word "xanthos," meaning yellow.
"Chron" is Greek in origin, derived from the Greek word "chronos" meaning time.
The root word "liter" is Latin in origin. It comes from the Latin word "litra," which was a unit of weight and volume.
The Latin word in Chorda. The Greek is Chorde. Early English Coord and Old French Corde
The word "terrible" is derived from the Latin word "terribilis," which means "frightening" or "causing terror." It entered English through Old French, which also borrowed it from Latin. Therefore, it is primarily of Latin origin, not Greek.
The origin of this word is Latin - from Opulentus
The word legend has a Latin origin. Myth and mythology derive from Greek.
The word politician is derived from the Greek word 'polis', which means 'city'. The word entered the English language through Latin.
From the greek aster to the latin Stella, which became in olde English estella and eventually star.
The word pyramid came into the English language through the Old French pyramide, which is a word of Latin origin. Latin had borrowed its term from Greek pyramis which seems has its origin in the very Egyptian language, in the word pimar, which stood for pyramid.
The word "flawless" is derived from the Old English word "flaw," which means a defect or imperfection, combined with the suffix "-less," meaning "without." While it has roots in Old English, the components of the word can be traced back to Germanic origins rather than Greek or Latin. Therefore, "flawless" is not Greek or Latin in origin.
There is no such word in Latin. Perhaps you mean classical Greek?
No, it is not. I think it has a latin origin.
"Deformed" is of Latin origin, from de-, "away from" and forma, "shape".
Middle English analogie, from Old French, from Latin analogia, from Greek analogiā, from analogos, proportionate.