lecture
lectern
dialectic
also dyslexia, although it doesn't look as if it does
English is not directly derived from Latin, but it has borrowed many words from Latin over the centuries. English is a Germanic language that has been influenced by Latin through the Norman Conquest and later through scholarly and scientific borrowings.
35000
Latin words make up about 50% (including Norman French words), and Greek makes up about 5%. The rest are mainly Germanic.
The Latin word rex means "king". Derived words include: regal, region, reign, sovereign, realm, etc.
primary, prime
The English language originates from the Germanic tribes in England and is not directly derived from Latin. However, English has borrowed many words from Latin over the centuries due to the influence of the Roman Empire and later through the Norman Conquest.
It's derived from the English words copy and right; in the most basic sense, it is the right to copy.Copy is from the Latin copia, an abundance (as in copious), and right is from the Latin rectus.
Approximately 60% of our words are derived from Latin (mainly through Old French), so an enumeration would be too tedious.
Many English words do not have Spanish root words, such as:algebrabuttcowdirteggfatghosthairiglooJewishkhakilumpmostnextplumqueenracesiptickleupvastwitchxrayyodzoom
Many words in both languages are derived from the same Latin root woods.
logradic ? Family: Trochillidae
English has many Latin roots because during the Middle Ages, Latin was the language of scholarship and the Catholic Church, leading to the borrowing of many Latin words into Old English. Additionally, after the Norman Conquest in 1066, French became the language of the ruling class in England and further enriched the English language with Latin-derived words.