The Latin for "external" is externus or extraneus.
Anoop Singh has written: 'Stabilization And Reform in Latin America' 'The debt problem' -- subject(s): Debts, External, External Debts 'Sustaining Latin America's resurgence' -- subject(s): Economic policy, Economic conditions, Fiscal policy
One word with a Latin root word "vulva" is "vulvar," which refers to the external female genitalia.
External (Latin for "outside") is an adjective used to modify a noun. It means the outside of something.Examples:External surface of the long bone.External signs of diseaseExternal acoustic meatus
Daniel Oks has written: 'Wealth effects of voluntary debt reduction in Latin America' -- subject(s): Debt equity conversion, Debt relief, Debts, External, External Debts
EXTERNA person associated with but not officially residing in an institution, especially a nonresident physician on a hospital staff.[Latin externus, external; see external.]extern·ship n.
Hala Helmy El-Saeed has written: 'The international banking system and the external debt of Latin American countries' -- subject(s): External Debts, International Banks and banking
The word "inertia" is related to its Latin root "iners" through its meaning of inactivity or resistance to change. "Iners" in Latin means lazy or inert, which reflects the concept of inertia in physics as an object's tendency to remain at rest or in motion unless acted upon by an external force.
The word millipede is derived from two Latin words: Latin roots mille ("thousand") and pes ("foot"). A millipede is an arthropod. An arthropod is an invertebrate animal having an exoskeleton (external skeleton), a segmented body, and jointed appendages.
As a result of both external and internal developments during the 1920s and early 1930s cultural nationalism was given wide play in the Latin-American area. The stream of immigrants from Italy, and Portugal diminished in the impact of the Depression.
ipso facto. Are you also doing the SMH giant crossword? A from Canberra
The Latin word for "ear" is auris (-is, f.). The diminutive, spelled either auricula or oricula, is used to refer to the external, visible part of the ear (it is the latter that gave rise to the modern Romance words for ear: Italian orecchio, Spanish oreja, French oreille, etc.).
Accreta is the clinical word deriving from the Latin word accretus. It means growth or gradual buildup by either accumulation/external addition or coherence/adhesion of separate particles.