Car comes from the Latin word carrus or carrum ("wheeled vehicle"), or the Middle English word carre ("cart") (from Old North French), in turn these are said to have originated from the Gaulish word "Karros" (a Gallic chariot).
>>From Latin carra, pl of carrus a type of wagon.
I want to add that the Latin word CARRA derives from the Hebrew word CaR in Ancient Hebrew, which means a riding compartment.
There is also a Gaulish word karros that might have come from the Latin and passed it into French. But either way, the basic idea is Hebrew - CaR, Latin - CARRA, English - CAR. It would make sense if there was a Greek pattern as well, but I do not see it. There is a Greek word KARROS, but I cannot find it's definition.
French comes from Latin, which comes from Greek, which comes from Hebrew. Hebrew is the oldest language we have record of, as of the late 1990's. Greek, Latin, French, and English all derive from Hebrew at some point.
The word alkali come from the language Arabic
Arabian
Arabic
from Latin
Greek
What language does the word spaghetti come from
The word alkali come from the language Arabic
from what language does the word plaid come from
English
It is not a word
The word restaurant come from French.
The word "thermos" comes from the Greek word "therme," which means heat.
The Italian language.
The word "gorgeous" originated from the Middle English word "gorgias," which came from the Old French word "gorgias," ultimately derived from the Latin word "gorgias" meaning elegant or refined.
it come from Arabic language.
The word ton came from a language called Latin
German is the language that's the source of the word 'frau'.