The word "therm" is derived from the Greek word "thermos," meaning "hot" or "heat." It is commonly used in scientific terminology, particularly in words related to temperature, such as "thermometer." While Latin has also influenced many scientific terms, "therm" specifically originates from Greek.
therm means heat
Therm
The Greek root word therm means heat.Common words that come from this root are "thermometer, theorem, thermal, thermos bottle, thermostat, and hypothermia." (Thanks to MSU.)
Greek 'thermo' = hot, 'therme' = heat So (speculating) "Therm, dude, totally therm" If you dont know, dont speak re papara... nobody is going to say it is "therm". "Kafto" is what they use. Leave the Greek to the Greeks...
Therm or thermo
The word part "therm" typically refers to heat or temperature-related concepts. It is commonly seen in words like "thermal" (related to heat) or "thermostat" (a device that controls temperature).
thermostat, thermometer, thermos, hypothermia
Flex a greek or latin
re is greek and latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
These is neither Latin nor Greek. These is English.
Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.