Hydro in Greek is H2O or water
Hydro means water in ancient Greek.
Hydro is the Greek word for water. As a prefix, it means something to do with or involving water.'Hydro' is the Greek word for water.
Hydro means water in ancient Greek.
The root word for water. (I think it's Greek, but I'm not sure.)
The prefix you add to "lysis" to mean, "separate or splitting using water" is "hydro-." "Hydro-" is the Greek prefix meaning "water."
The root word "hydro" means water. It is commonly used in scientific terms related to water, such as "hydrology" (the study of water) and "hydrophobic" (repelling water).
The prefix you add to "lysis" to mean, "separate or splitting using water" is "hydro-." "Hydro-" is the Greek prefix meaning "water."
Hydro means water in Latin
hydro means hydro
The word root of hydroelectric is "hydro," which comes from the Greek word for water.
"Hydro" does not mean water in Greek; it actually means "water" in English. The element you are referring to that turns into water when it burns in air is hydrogen (not hydro), with the chemical symbol H. When hydrogen gas reacts with oxygen in the air, it forms water (H2O) through a chemical reaction.