kardia
Heart is called as 'Cardium'. Cardia is a Greek word for heart. Cor is a Latin word for heart. From 'Cor' you get coronary word.
καρδιά (kardia)
Cardio
The root word "cardio" is derived from the Greek word "kardia," which means heart. It is commonly used in medical terminology related to the heart or cardiovascular system.
The root word is actually cardio and it means heart
The term cardio refers to the heart. The medical word cardiac was derived from the Greek word for heart, which was kardia.
in hebrew: milev (mee, lev) a construct word
Credo is a Latin word meaning "to trust" (e.g. credit, credentials), but cardio comes from the Greek word καρδία, meaning "heart". Now, that didn't quite answer your question, but I'm doubt that, based on the definitions and morphology, they do actually come from the same root.However, the Latin word for "heart" is cors, cordis, so one would imagine that both the Latin and Greek for "heart" have a similar etymology (at some point in the past).
Yes (kor), and it is related to the word for courage (kourous)
Καρδιολόγος (cardiologos) from καρδιά (cardia) meaning heart.
The root "cardio-" is Greek, from the word kardia, "heart".
The Greek root of the word "cardiogram" is "cardio," meaning heart, and "gram," meaning a record or a written thing. Therefore, "cardiogram" refers to a record or tracing of the heart's electrical activity.