The Latin preposition inter means between, among or during.
Interview, international
BEHIND
The Latin root word "inter" means "between" or "among." It is commonly used in English to indicate connections, interactions, or relationships between different things or groups.
Not word, but prefix 'inter' directly from latin, 'inside', 'between', 'among', together.
Appropriate does not have a prefix. The Latin origins of the word do make use of Latin prefix however. The word "appropriate" comes from Late Latin appropriatus, past participle of appropriare, from Latin ad- + propriusown.Words such as Misappropriate use the word appropriate as a root word and add a prefix to it. In the case of misappropriate, the prefix would be mis-.The related word expropriate drops the a and adds ex-. This is not really an example of a prefix added to the word appropriate, but rather a word coming from the same Latin origins. Expropriate comes from Medieval Latin expropriatus, past participle of expropriare, from Latin ex- + propriusown. As you can see, expropriate comes from a Latin word where a LATIN prefix was added to the same LATIN root word proprius.
Appropriate does not have a prefix. The Latin origins of the word do make use of Latin prefix however. The word "appropriate" comes from Late Latin appropriatus, past participle of appropriare, from Latin ad- + propriusown.Words such as Misappropriate use the word appropriate as a root word and add a prefix to it. In the case of misappropriate, the prefix would be mis-.The related word expropriate drops the a and adds ex-. This is not really an example of a prefix added to the word appropriate, but rather a word coming from the same Latin origins. Expropriate comes from Medieval Latin expropriatus, past participle of expropriare, from Latin ex- + propriusown. As you can see, expropriate comes from a Latin word where a LATIN prefix was added to the same LATIN root word proprius.
Quad- which comes from the Latin word quattuor"four"
"doubtful" does not have a prefix. It does, however, have a suffix ('-ful').
The prefix "geno-" comes from the Greek word "genos," meaning "race" or "kind." It is commonly used in words relating to genetics or generation.
The word 'Audi' comes from Latin.
Interview is a word, not a prefix. Inter- is a prefix.
The Latin root in the word "inconsequential" is "sequi," meaning "to follow." The prefix "in-" meaning "not," added to "consequent," which ultimately comes from "sequi," results in "inconsequential" meaning "not following logically or naturally."
The prefix sect means 'cut'. It comes from a Greek and Latin root word.
Predator has no prefix. It comes from the Latin noun praeda meaning "booty, plunder."