Agape (ah-GAH-pee): "love"
Amare is Latin for "to love."It's also a passive singular imperative of the same verb, meaing "be loved!"Coincidentally, it's also an adverb meaning "bitterly," or a vocative meaning "O bitter one."(This means that amare amare amare could be translated "Be bitterly loved, O bitter one!")
genus
In Greek, ''love'' is αγάπη or ερως (agapi/agape or eros). I cant see any connection.
alibi in greek is άλλοθι (allothi) and it has the same meaning.
Homophone is Greek. The roots are homos "same" and phone "sound".
The word "homonym" is of Greek origin, coming from the words "homo-" meaning "same" and "-onym" meaning "name." It refers to words that sound alike but have different meanings.
The name Kayla does not have a direct equivalent in Latin. It is a modern name that has its roots in various languages such as Hebrew and Arabic.
It depends on the word. For homicide, it is Latin and means 'man'. However for homophone or homosexual, it is Greek and means 'same'.same
The Latin spelling for the name 'Jeremiah' is Ieremias. The spelling is the same as the ancient, classical Greek. The name means 'Yhwh will raise' in Hebrew.
Spina is Latin for spine. Spina Bifida means split spine in Latin.
In Latin, homo means "man" in the sense of "person." (The word for "man"as opposted to "woman" is vir.) It should not be confused with the Ancient Greek word homo which means 'same'.
uni (latin) mono (greek) both of them mean one