Coined from Ancient Greek ἄστρον (ástron), "'star'") and ναύτης (naútēs), "'sailor'").
So starsailor.
It is derived from the same Greek root (nautes) as 'nautical'. 'Nautes' applies to anything to do with ships or saling. So, an 'astronaut' is someone who has a ship that allows them to 'sail' through the stars (aster).
Αστροναύτης and αστροναύτισσα are Greek equivalents of the English word "astronaut." Context makes clear whether feminine (case 2) or masculine (example 1) gender suits for the English singular noun whose origins trace back to the merger of the Greek words ἄστρον (ástron, “star”) and ναύτης (naútēs, “sailor”). The respective pronunciations will be "A-stro-NAF-tees" in the masculine and "A-stro-NAF-tees-sa" in Aeginan Greek.
yes
aimant
No, the noun 'astronauts' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'astronaut', a general word for someone who is trained to travel in a spacecraft.A proper noun is the name of a specific person, place, or thing. A proper noun for the common noun 'astronauts' is the names of the astronauts.
Astro would be the root word of astronaut. the root word astro means of space.
Cosmonaut is the term derived from the word astronaut which stands for someone who rides the superhighway in search of information. There are many such people who have taken part in space missions.
1929 France, by Belgian-born sci-fi writer Joseph Henri Honore Boex.
No, the word 'astronaut' is a noun.
Voyager is a spacecraft launched by NASA in 1977 to study the outer planets. The word "naut" is a term derived from the Greek word for sailor, often used in combination with other words like "astronaut" or "aquanaut" to refer to those who travel in space or underwater.
The word astronaut is a noun, a word for a profession of people. The word astronaut is singular, common, abstract noun.
Astro mans star and naut means traveller. Or Star traveller. It is Greek.
No, the word astronaut is not capitalized in that sentence.
The word "astronaut" has three syllables. The word is divided as as-tro-naut.
Cosmonaut or astronaut.
Yes, the noun 'astronaut' is a common noun, a general word for any astronaut anywhere.
"An astronaut" is the correct form, not "a astronaut." "an" is used instead of "a" whenever the word it modifies begins with a vowel.