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Tele- is a Greek prefix (pronounced ˈtile in Greek) meaning "distant". It can be short for television in British English.
No, "seismo" is not a Greek prefix. The Greek prefix for earthquake is "seismo-." In Greek, "seismos" means earthquake, so "seismo-" is used as a prefix in words related to earthquakes or seismic activity.
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The word "preheat" has a prefix. The prefix "pre-" means before.
Find the prefix of the following words. The prefix of that word is the root "dis-"
The prefix "glu" comes from the Greek words γλυκύς (glukus), meaning "sweet".
Yes. Looking at many different words that the English language has acquired, words that have prefix of or-, trace back to Greek roots. The Greek word "ora" which means "of the mouth" comonly used in text which described the Greek goddess Aphrodite.
In words that come from Greek the prefix ped- stands for "child."
In Hebrew, the Torah. In Greek, the Pentateuch. (note here the Greek prefix "penta" for five) Both words are used to refer to the following books: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy and Numbers.
Greek, from the Greek πέντε (pente). The Latin equivalent is quinque; which is where words such as quintillion come from.
Duotone and duodecimo are both words that begin with the prefix duo. Duo means dual and allows you to get an understanding of the word following the prefix.