An instrument for reproducing sounds, especially articulate speech, at a distance., To convey or announce by telephone.
The Greek roots of "telephone" are tele- "at a distance" and phoneo "speak."
The root phone, meaning "sound", is Greek, not Latin. There are many English words containing this root, including telephone, phonograph, and phonetic.
The telephone from the Greek: tēle, meaning "far" and phōnē, meaning "voice"
The Greek roots of "telephone" are tele- "at a distance" and phoneo "speak."
It means the telephone is not working.
Telephone is Latin Tele meaning long Phone meaning sound
The Greek roots of "telephone" are tele- "at a distance" and phoneo "speak."
Tele- is a Greek prefix (pronounced ˈtile in Greek) meaning "distant". It can be short for television in British English.
No, there is not a latin root meaning for fog.
Photo meaning light.Tele meaning sound. Lens isn't a root word I'm just going to tell you that.
The root of "claudere" meaning close is "claus-".
The Latin root of the word beneficiary comes from the Latin adverb "bene" meaning good.