To look is spectare; to see is videre.
Spectare gives us the root "spect" as in such words as respect, inspect, spectacle, spectator.
Videre gives us not only "vid" as in video and provide, but also, from its past participle visus, the root "vis" as in visual and revise.
scope is the latin root that means 'to see'
"To see" in Latin is videre, the infinitive of video, "I see".
Vid-.
Latin Root: -spec (to look, see)
The Latin root for "suspect" is "suspectus," which means "suspicious" or "distrusted." The word is derived from the Latin verb "suspicere," which means "to look up to" or "to mistrust."
scope is the latin root that means 'to see'
see
spec
"See" is an English equivalent of the Latin root vis-. It also serves as the translation of the alternate Latin root vid-. The pronunciation will be "wihs" in Church and classical Latin.
Revisere.
See
spectavit is how you say look and also ecce
The Latin root to turn is vertere.We see it in words such as divert, convert, revert ... and also verse and aversion.
The Latin root "umbr-" comes from the word "umbra," meaning "shade" or "shadow." It is commonly used in English to refer to something dark or obscured.
Some words with the Latin root "theo" include theology, theocracy, and atheist.