Prae/pre, meaning "before," and ludere, meaning "to play."
Aquarium and aquatic are two words that come to mind.
It originates from two Latin words, "amphi" meaning two, "bio" meaning life.
Ad ("to") and Deus ("God").
An antecedent is a word or thing that is referred to in a following sentence. The word antecedent come from the Latin words 'ante' which means 'before' and 'cedo' which means 'fall'. The two Latin words together mean 'to fall before.'
No, two different languages. But Latin did come from Italians.
scientia
I believe terrestrial ultimately comes from the latin terra, meaning Earth, and extra means outside - so you put the two together, and you can someone who is from outside of Earth.
Optimus is Latin for "excelent", and Maximus is Latin for "greatest". We get words like "optimal" and "maximum" from these two.
Latin has two words meaning benevolence: benevolentia and largitio.
Many Latin words or words of Latin origin have entered English via two routes. One was that Latin was the language of the church in the Middle Ages. The other was the Norman conquest of England. French became the court language and many French words entered into the English language. These words are usually of Latin origin. Many international words in medicine, law and theology are Latin. Many words in medicine, law and theology are Latin. Western European languages have adopted and adapted the Latin alphabet. The only letters in the English language which do not come from the Latin alphabet are J, U and W.
The two Latin words which mean Speechless are Ellinguis and mutus.
Latin is a tough language to master, and translations can be difficult. There are two Latin words for sportsman, Latro and Athleta.