Greek roots are the simple elements out of which Greek words are formed. Likewise, Latin roots are the simple elements out of which Latin words are formed. In Latin, the phrase 'definition of Greek and Latin roots' is 'definitio radicum graecarum latinarumque'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'definitio' means 'definition'. The noun 'radicum' means 'roots'. The adjective 'graecarum' means 'Greek'. The noun 'latinarum' means 'Latin'. And the enclitic 'que' means 'and'.
re is greek and latin
Francium has a Latin root. It is named after France, where it was discovered.
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
There is no Greek root vit-. It is a Latin root.
Latin.
It doesnt have a greek root, its latin sol
Greek
The root that means 'severe' is from the ancient, classical Greek and Latin languages. That root is auster- in Latin, and austeros in Greek. From that root derive the Latin adjective 'austerus', which means 'severe'; and the Latin noun 'austeritas', which means 'severeness, severity'.
in greek is επανασυνεδριάζω. It doesnt have a greek root, i think is latin