Telephone
The word that combines the roots for "faraway" and "sound" is "telephony," which refers to the transmission of sound over long distances, such as in telephone communication.
The word "faraway" is a single word.
The word "phonograph" has Greek roots. It comes from the Greek words "phōnē" (sound) and "graphein" (to write), which together mean "sound writer."
The word "homophone" comes from the Greek roots "homo-" meaning "same" and "-phone" meaning "sound". It refers to words that sound the same but have different meanings and often different spellings.
The word "homophone" comes from the Greek roots "homos" (same) and "phone" (sound), so it literally means "same sound." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings or spellings.
The Latin roots "audi" meaning hear, and "aud" meaning sound would help determine that an unfamiliar word is related to being able to hear something. Words such as "auditory" or "audio" would be examples of words derived from these roots and relate to the sense of hearing.
its two words
A complete list of such words would be over 100,000 words. Hat has no roots or affixes. Neither does chair, and thousands of other words. Do you actually know what roots and affixes are?
Words with lect in them
The Korean alphabet was invented in the fifteenth century and has roots in the Chinese alphabet. Each sound is represented by a symbol or letter., which are put together to form words.
Vicinity.
By looking at the words' roots
continued, deep, enduring, strech, expanded, stringy, distant, extensive, faraway, far-off..
Etymology is the science of Language and it's roots.
words like pencil with the "l" sound
For example "rebellion."
* legal * legislate * legislature
fybro roots