No, it comes from the Latin verb, addicere.
The Greek word for other is άλλος allos
As a word used to explain an abnormal reaction, it was first used by an Austrian Pediatrician about 1906. Made out of the Greek word Allos, meaning something different or strange
The word "allergy" comes from the Greek words "allos" (meaning "other") and "ergon" (meaning "reaction" or "work"). It was first coined in 1906 by the Austrian pediatrician Clemens von Pirquet to describe an immune response to normally harmless substances.
The base word in "allergic" is "allergy." The prefix "all-" is derived from the Greek word "allos," meaning "other," while the suffix "-ic" indicates a relation. Thus, "allergic" describes a condition related to allergies.
Hypno -- the greek word for sleep.
From the Greek word "synopsis".
From the Greek word for "change."
greek
The word 'great' does not come from greek. it's old English from the germanic: "grautaz"
the greek word kratein means reign
There is no root word for Addict. This is because addict is the root word of addiction.
Addict is rooted in the Latin verb addictus, which is the past participle form of addicere, and translates to "assigned" or "surrendered."