lag
The root word "law" comes from the Old Norse word "lag" which means rule or regulation. It is used in various words related to rules, regulations, and legal systems.
Yes, the word "astronomy" is derived from the Latin word "astronomia," which comes from the Greek words "astron" (star) and "nomos" (law) and translates to "law of the stars."
The root for the word "legislate" is "legis," which comes from the Latin word "lex," meaning "law."
Privilege comes from the Latin word privilegium which means law relating to an individual person.
The word numismatist comes from numismatics, which originated in 1829. Meaning 'study of coins', it comes from numismatic (adj.) 'of coins,' which was borrowed in 1792 from the French word numismatique which comes from 1579, which comes from the Latin word numisma (gen. numismatis) meaning 'coin, currency,' which comes from the Greek word nomisma meaning 'current coin,' and literally 'what has been sanctioned by custom or usage,' which comes from nomizein'have in use, adopt a custom,' from nomos meaning 'custom, law, usage,'. The word comes from PIE base nem- 'to divide, distribute, allot.'
I think the root word for economy is economic.
The word astronomy (from the Greek words astron(ἄστρον), "star" and -nomy from nomos (νόμος), "law" or "culture") literally means "law of the stars" (or "culture of the stars" depending on the translation).
Oh, yes they did and we know what they were like. The very word LAW in English is a Viking word. The English word for a local law, e.g. laws about where you can park cars etc., is "by-law". The word "by" comes from the Scandinavian word for "town". Similarly a local election is called a "by-election". There are no indications that the 'Danelaw' in England was more lawless than the areas under Anglo-Saxon rule.
That is a Yiddish word borrowed from Hebrew. In Yiddish it refers to a persons' child's in-laws. (There is no such English word for this relationship). For example, your daughter's mother-in-law and father-in-law would be your machatunim.This word comes from the Hebrew word מחותנים (meh-khoo-tah-neem), which means "married ones."
The word that comes before "box" is "big," the word that comes after "time" is "management," and the word that comes after "liquid" is "form."
There are no compound words with the word law in it
what word comes to mind when you hear the word math