annus means year
decem means ten
the plural of annus is anni
so ten years is decem anni
it would be different if you were saying "for ten years" or "within ten years"
then it gets a bit more complicated, but basically the answer to the question is decem anni
Latin root = deca, which means ten.
Ten is the Latin root word. It means to hold or strain.
The Latin root word for platform is "planta," which means "sole of the foot" or "footprint."
The Greek word deca or deka (ten) is the root word of decade.
It means ten. The root comes from "decem," which is the cardinal number 10, and "decimus," the ordinal number "tenth."
The ten root of these words derives from the Latin tenere, which just means "hold."
The root is origo, which is Latin for birth, beginning, or source, which is from oriri which means "to rise".
The root of the word "generation" is "gen," which comes from the Latin word "gens" meaning family or clan.
deci- is a prefix, meaning ten. e.g. decimate - reduce by a tenth; decibel - ten Bel (unit of sound)
The name of September comes from the Latin word for 'seven'. The months of October, November, and December are also named for the Latin words for eight, nine, and ten, respectively.
I think you are thinking of the word "tenuous" which derives from the Latin root "tenuis" meaning thin. This would appear to be related to the Latin "tendere" meaning to stretch, which itself derives from the Greek word "teinein" meaning the same thing, and is the root of such words as "tendon", "tend", "tendency", "pretend", "intention", "contender" and many others. But there is also the word "tenure" which comes from the Latin root "teneo", to hold, as do the words "tenacious", "tenacity", "retention" and so on.
latin