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The Latin word for 'counsel' is 'concilium'. One derivative in English from that original Latin word is conciliary. Another example of an English derivative is reconciliation.
The Latin word 'impluvium' refers to an opening in the roof of the atrium of a Roman house or the basin for the rain water below. It's a Latin derivative of the verb 'impluo, impluere', which means 'to rain upon'. The verb 'impluo' in turn is a derivative of the combination of the preposition 'in' and the verb 'pluo' [from 'pluit, pluere', which means 'it rains']. Other Latin derivatives of 'pluo' are 'pluvia' or 'rain'; 'pluvialis' or 'relating to rain'; and 'pluvius' or 'of rain, rain-bringing, rainy'. Tne English derivative pluvial means 'of, relating to or characterized by rain'. Another English derivative, pluviometer, is another word for 'rain gauge'. Still another English derivative, pluvious, means 'of or pertaining to rain'.
cede, recede, recession are some examples
The word ibidem is a derivative of the Latin word 'ibi', which means 'there'. It's an adverb. Its meaning is 'in the same place'. And it's a direct borrow by both the English and French languages, from the adverb 'ibi' combined with the suffix '-dem'.
Some English derivatives of "rogat" include "interrogate" and "prerogative." "Interrogate" comes from the Latin word "interrogare," which means to ask or question. "Prerogative" comes from the Latin word "praerogativa," which originally referred to the right to vote first in an assembly and later evolved to mean a special right or privilege.
The English noun carpology is a derivative of the Latin root 'carp-' for 'fruit'. It's the study of fruits. Another derivative is the adjective polycarpus, which means 'bearing many specimens of a fruit at once'. Still another derivative is xylocarp, which refers to a 'hard fruit'.
Nearly 50 percent of our words in English have Latin roots. Some students who take Latin in school say that learning Latin helps them understand the meanings of words in English.
Latin, Latin and more Latin. In elementary school they learned some English and some penmanship, but once they hit Grammar school it was Latin all the way. Fourteen-year-olds regularly translated Latin classics like Ovid into English and then back into Latin.
The Latin word caupo means "a petty tradesman". The commonest derivative of this in modern English is the word "cheap". Old English had the word ceapian, meaning "to trade", which represents an early borrowing of caupo into Germanic (German still has the word kaufen, "to buy", from the same source). The expression "god chep" in Middle English meant "a good bargain", and this led "cheap" to develop its modern sense of "inexpensive".
Some English derivatives of the Latin word 'teneo' include "retain," "contain," "tenant," and "tenacious."
diligenter=diligently
Triclinium is Latin for a dining room