the phonema "Homo" may be both Latin and Greek but with different meanings, Latin homo is a word meaning "man", greek homo is a prefix meaning "similar". This two phonemas are homophonic towards each others, but not homonymic, the aspiration before the"o" is indicated in latin by the by letter "h", in greek by the spiritus asper.
Greek.
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'.
"Man" is of neither Greek nor Latin descent. It is Germanic and Norse in origin. The Latin for man is vir or homo; the Greek is Άνθρωπος (anthropos).
The Latin word "homo" means person, human being.
homo meaning either: a. man (latin) b. same (greek??)
Homo is a Latin word. It means 'human' or 'man', depending on your interpretation.
Because - the prefix 'homo' is from the Latin word 'hominis' - meaning 'human being'. The word 'homosexual'is a hybrid from Greek and Latin... From the Greek ὁμός homos, "same".
Homo.
is heptathalon a greek or latin word
homo or homosapien
Latin word for being is "esse".
The original word was the Latin monarcha, which evolved into the Greek word monárchēs. Therefore, it does have origins in both Latin and Greek.