The Latin roots ced, cede, or cess are seen in words such as "procedure" and "success". They have the general meaning "go", "move", or "yield".
cede is go or yield, but not move
move is: mob, mot, or mov
all are "move" from Latin (mobilis, movere, motus)
APEX- Ced
The root word for movement is move.
kinesi/o
Moved
This question has been asked many many many times. Book does not derive from Latin, it derived from German. Mobile comes from the Latin word mobilus (capable of being moved), which in turn came from movere, which means to move.
Culp
disparage
It means cars.
Loqui - means 'to speak, talk, say.'
The combination of a Latin prefix and of a Latin root means 'to move back'. The prefix re- means 'back'. The root ced-, from which the infinitive 'cedere' is derived, means 'to go'.
The Latin root "mob" means to move or change. It is the base for words like mobile, mobility, and motion.
The Latin root "oscill" means to swing or to move back and forth. This root is often seen in words related to movement such as oscillate, oscillator, and oscillation.
The Latin root 'ax' means "to go, to move, to lead." It is derived from the Latin word "agere," which means "to do or drive." This root is commonly found in words related to action, movement, and leadership.
Yes, the root word of "mobile" is "mobilis" in Latin, which means "movable" or "able to move."
The Latin root word for "to move" is kine or kines.
The Latin root for the word motivation "motivus" means "to stir or move". Motivation is an impetus that makes us move to do something. The definition of motivation is an emotion or desire that operates on the will and causes us to do something to bring it about.
Around in Latin can be undique, circum or circa.
This question has been asked many many many times. Book does not derive from Latin, it derived from German. Mobile comes from the Latin word mobilus (capable of being moved), which in turn came from movere, which means to move.
The Latin root ac- means 'sharp'. A Latin derivative is the infinitive 'acuere', which means 'to sharpen'. Its past participle is 'acutus', which means 'sharp'. An English derivative is adjective is 'acute'.The root 'acu-'.
The Latin word for light is "lucet." The root would perhaps begin with "luc--".
The root that means 'severe' is from the ancient, classical Greek and Latin languages. That root is auster- in Latin, and austeros in Greek. From that root derive the Latin adjective 'austerus', which means 'severe'; and the Latin noun 'austeritas', which means 'severeness, severity'.