Deci is Latin for "ten", Centi is Latin for "hundred"
Dec- or Deci-
The prefix deci- comes from the Latin word for ten.
milli- = 0.001 centi = 0.01 deci- = 0.1 All these are from Latin. deka- = 10.0 hekta- = 100.0 kilo- = 1000.0 These are from Greek.
"Deci" is not a standalone language. It could be a misspelling or abbreviation for something else. Can you provide more context or details for me to better assist you?
One-tenth is the written symbol for 'deci'. In the form of numbers, it's written as 1/10. The prefix 'deci-' refers to one-tenth of whatever the unit of measurement is. It comes from the Latin 'decimus', which means 'the tenth'.
Flex a greek or latin
Mille is Latin for thousand. Annus is latin for year. Milleannus <-> Millenium, thus you have the translation equivalent to one thousand years. Kilo is Greek for thousand. The metric system uses Greek words for the first three increases in magnitude (deca, hecto, kilo), and Latin words for the first three decreases in magnitude (deci, centi, milli). Deci is the only word that legitimately means what we use it to describe - tenth; centi is hundred, while milli is thousand. Source: wikipedia
deci- is a tenth. Decimal, decimate, December (originally the tenth month)...
re is greek and latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
These is neither Latin nor Greek. These is English.