"Rupt" comes from the Latin word "Rupto", meaning "I burst".
If you are thinking "scop" as in the root in words like "endoscopy", it's Greek, not Latin. Probably from skopeo = look for
The letters '-ic' aren't a root. Instead, they're a suffix that comes into English by way of ancient, classical Latin and the even earlier, ancient, classical Greek. In Latin, the suffix is '-icus'. In the earlier Greek, the suffix is '-ikos'. Either way, the meaning is the same: 'having the character or form of' or 'of or relating to'.
Pulse has no root word. It is from the Latin pulsus which is from Latin pellere (to set in motion by beating or striking) and the suffix -tus (the suffix for action verbs).
latin, it means bend angle ankle mangle sanskrit..ankah
It actually does it has a prefix and a suffix and the prefix is archaeo which is Latin the suffix is ologists
From the Latin fructus, meaning fruit
latin because of you look up mit in the latin roots dictionary you will find mit as one of the latin roots
re is greek and latin
The root to the word advance would be in Latin. The Latin root words "ad" and "ante" meaning "from" and "before".
Francium has a Latin root. It is named after France, where it was discovered.
it is a suffix
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."