Grateful comes from Latin gratus meaning "pleasing."
Cor is one Latin equivalent of 'heart'. The Latin word means 'heart' in the sense of 'the organ for pumping blood'. Animus is another Latin equivalent of 'heart'. It means 'heart' in the sense of 'courage, the seat of feeling'.
The root word is tude, meaning Garateful. [ Sounds weird, but it's true!! Latin is very confusing!]
It simply means "pleasing" or " VERY pleasing".
Synonyms for "grateful":pleasedthankfulappreciativegratified
Yes, "grateful" and "graduate" are in the same word family. Both words share the root word "grat," which comes from the Latin word "gratus" meaning pleasing or thankful. "Grateful" comes from the Latin word "gratus" and "graduate" comes from the Latin word "gradus" meaning step or degree. So, both words are related through their common Latin root.
The noun form of the adjective 'grateful' is gratefulness.A related noun form is gratitude.Both grateful and gratitude come from the Latin word gratus which means pleasing, thankful.In 16 -17th centuries 'grate' was used in English and that came to be grateful.
The root word "cor" means heart in Latin. It is often used in English words related to the heart, such as "coronary" or "cordial."
as far as i know there is no "exact" translation for the word. but the root word is "Gracia" meaning grace , or to accept greatfully.
Heart in Latin is cor, cordis
Courage comes from the Latin word, cor, which means 'heart'.
The Latin root word "cord" means heart. It is commonly found in words related to feelings, emotions, and relationships.