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The word 'bravo' is Italian in origin.
The origin language of words can vary depending on the specific word. Words come from a variety of languages such as Latin, Greek, French, and German, among others. Language evolves over time as cultures interact and influence each other through trade, conquest, and migration.
The word "aubergine" comes from the French language.
The language of origin of the word "ivory" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "ebur", which means "ivory" or "elephant."
The word "plateau" is derived from the French language.
Chanteuse is a word of French origin.
The word "walrus" comes from Dutch and Scandinavian languages. In Dutch, it is "walrus" and in Scandinavian languages, it is "hvalros" (Norwegian and Danish) or "hvalross" (Swedish).
The origin of a word indicates the language the word originally came from, or the languages certain parts (such as prefixes and suffixes) come from.
The word 'bravo' is Italian in origin.
None, since there is no such word as "radious". Radius, however, come from Latin.
Kiosk comes from Turkey - it is Turkish. "Turkish" is it's language origin. However, "pavilion" is it's word origin.
Gold (in the English language and other Germanic languages) was in the past the name for a yellow flower. The root of the Germanic word is very probable of Sanskrit origin. In many languages the word gold is similar to yellow.
The word "hassle" comes from the Middle English word "hasel" meaning "to hack at." It ultimately traces its origin back to Old Norwegian and Danish languages.
It's Old English, with a possible Germanic origin.
The word tornado is of Spanish origin; and is a combination of "Tronada" (thunderstorm) and "Tornar" (to turn)
The origin language of words can vary depending on the specific word. Words come from a variety of languages such as Latin, Greek, French, and German, among others. Language evolves over time as cultures interact and influence each other through trade, conquest, and migration.
The word "sputnik" comes from Russian, meaning "satellite" or "companion." It was famously used to name the first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, launched by the Soviet Union in 1957.