The Latin word for body is corpus (gen. corporis)
In the English name, Mary Poppins? There are no Greek or Latin derivatives.
The derivatives for the Latin word "simia" include "simian" in English and "singe" in French.
Some derivatives are aqueous, aquaduct, aquifer.
clavicle
The number 'two' is the English equivalent of the Latin root syllables 'duo-'. English derivatives of the Latin root include the adjective dual; the adjective/noun duodecimal; and the nouns duet. Latin derivatives includes 'duodecim', which means loosely 'twelve' and literally 'two plus ten'; and the verb 'duplicare', which means 'to double'.
The derivatives of the Latin word "vale" include "valeo" meaning "to be strong" or "to be well" and "valediction" meaning "a farewell."
Some derivatives for the Latin word "multi" include "multiple", "multiply", and "multitude".
The Latin root syllable 'tot-' means 'so many'. Its English derivatives are total and totality. Its Latin derivatives are the adverb 'totiens', for 'so many times'; and the adjective 'totus', for 'the complete, the entire, the whole'.
benign, benignant
redirection
nautical
Some are sedimentary, sedative, sedentary, sedan, and sediment