The word "chronicle" was borrowed from the Latin word "chronica," which in turn came from the Greek word "khronika," meaning "annals" or "chronological records."
The word "moccasin" is borrowed from the Algonquian language.
English borrowed the word "facade" from French.
The word "chronicle" comes from the Old French word "cronique," which in turn is derived from the Latin word "chronica."
The word "canyon" is borrowed from the Spanish word "cañón," which means tube or pipe.
The word "market" is borrowed from the Latin language. It comes from the Latin word "mercatus," which means trading or buying and selling.
The word "tea" was borrowed from the Mandarin Chinese word "chá" (茶) during the 17th century.
It was from Greek.
coleslaw
No. A borrowed or loan word is a word adopted from another language without translation. Much of the technical language of music is borrowed from Italian: lento, piano, and opera are a few. Many culinary terms are loans from French.
The word "market" is borrowed from the Latin language. It comes from the Latin word "mercatus," which means trading or buying and selling.
The word "plum" comes from the Old English word "plume" which evolved from the Latin word "prunum." This ultimately traces back to the Greek word "prunon."
It came from the Germanic Tribes.
The word "canyon" is borrowed from the Spanish word "cañón," which means tube or pipe.
France; the English language "borrowed" it in 1902.
Some words borrowed into Spanish are: Flashback internet waffle weekend western (referring to cowboy movies) whisky
One example of a word borrowed from English and used in Spanish is "whisky." It is used in Spanish to refer to the alcoholic beverage.
It has been stolen, rather than borrowed, from Spanish. The Spanish word cañon (a tube) is derived from a Latin word canna meaning reed.