Forms of the word, sometimes starting with f- and sometimes with p-, have been around in languages older than Latin (such as Sanskrit) as well as those that coexisted with Latin (as Old Germanic) and many more modern languages. "Pater" is a form in Latin.
The word factory is derived from the medieval Latin word factoria. It is also derived from the Latin word factor.
Morbid, derived from the Latin morbus (disease)
Latin and the word it's derived from is bis source:Cambridge Latin Course Unit 1
The Latin word "environment" is derived from "environs," which comes from the words "en," meaning "in" or "around," and "virer," meaning "to surround."
engineer is derived from the latin word: ingenium
no
The English adjective "insular" derived from the Latin word insula, meaning "island."
The word is "audience." It comes from the Latin word "audire," which means "to hear."
Latin word
virus is derived from latin virus that mean slimy, poisonous, or toxin.
No, it is an English word. It may be derived from a latin root, however.
The English word derived from the Latin root meaning "to settle" is "sedentary."