"Hydr" in "hydrophobic" refers to water. A substance that is hydrophobic tends to repel or not mix with water.
hydrate
An adverb with the Greek root "hydr" is "hydraulically," which means relating to water flow or pressure.
Yes
HydrophilicHydrophobicDehydrationDehydrateHydrogenHydraAnhydrite...and many more thanks to Chemistry
It is also known as quicksilver or hydrargyrum (hydr- Water and argyros-silver)
The prefix "hydro" means water, aquatic, aqua, etc...
Latinized Greek: hydrargyrum, from "hydr-" meaning watery or runny and "argyros" meaning silver
No help
In reference to elements it is Mercury. The name derives from Hydrargyrum which is Hydr- meaning water and argyros meaning silver.
its a cable. only 96-98 SPORTS 1.8 Liter have hydr. clutch. (of the early models you mention)
No, "hydrate" does not contain the affix "hy-". In this case, "hydrate" is a standalone word consisting of the root "hydr-" which means water, and the suffix "-ate" indicating a salt or compound.