The Latin stem may be defined as the base in Latin from which a given word in Latin or in any other language is derived. For example, 'Audi-' is the Latin stem to the Latin noun 'audientia', which means 'attention, hearing or listening'; the Latin verb 'audire', which means 'to hear or listen'; the Latin noun 'auditorium', which means a 'hall for listening'; and the Latin noun 'auditus', which means 'the sense of hearing'. It also is the stem to the English language words 'auditor' and 'auditorium'.
Polis is a latin stem which means- City I promiss you this is right! :)
it means root
Leg; shin.
idiotic pastry
pingere is of latin stem, meaning - "to colour, paint"
The Latin stem "vid" means "see" or "perceive." It is commonly found in words related to vision, sight, or observation.
'Sur-' comes from Latin. In Latin, it means above. The word and prefix 'Super' is related.
There are two Latin stems within the English language word 'jurisdiction'. One is the stem jur-, for 'law'. The other is the stem dic-, for 'saying'.
In Latin, 'Post' is a preposition that governs the accusative case. It means after or behind.
The stem is sept-.
Scribo, which literally means "write" in latin
Stipes would refer to a stem of an apple, etc...