The root word of pedicure is "pedi," which comes from the Latin word "pes," meaning "foot."
There are three syllables in the word "pedicure."
The root word "pedics" derives from the Greek word "pous" or "pod," which means "foot". It is commonly found in terms related to feet, such as podiatry (study and treatment of feet) or pedicure (beauty treatment for the feet).
The Latin root word "ped" means foot as in body part, not foot as in a unit of length. It is commonly found in words related to feet or foot-like structures.
The root word of "unusual" is "usual."
The root word is gift.
There are 3 syllables in the word pedicure, divided as follows:pe\di\cure
My feet are in desperate need of a pedicure.
The root ped has two meanings, one in Greek and the other is Latin. Ped in greek means child, as in pedagogy or pediatrics, while in Latin it means foot, as in pedestrian or pedal
The Latin root word "ped" means foot as in body part, not foot as in a unit of length. It is commonly found in words related to feet or foot-like structures.
Pedicure
The key difference would have to be that a manicure is when your hands are being treated by soaking, filing, and/or grooming and painting your nails, and a pedicure is when your feet are being treated by soaking, filing, grooming, and/or painting toenails. As for the difference within the meanings of "manicure" and "pedicure", the word manicure came from the latin word manus, meaning "hand", and the word pedicure came from the latin word pedis, meaning "feet".
There are three syllables in the word "pedicure."
There are three syllables like so: ped-i-cure.
Pedi=foot Cure=another word for an antidote aka Foot antidote
belle pedicure (accent acute ' over the e in pedicure)
do chiblains contraindicate a pedicure
Fugitive has no root word it is the root word.