cor, cordis
Heart in Latin is cor, cordis
Cor is one Latin equivalent of 'heart'. The Latin word means 'heart' in the sense of 'the organ for pumping blood'. Animus is another Latin equivalent of 'heart'. It means 'heart' in the sense of 'courage, the seat of feeling'.
The English word for the Latin word "cord" is "heart."
Well you could use the latin word for brave which is Amimus. And the latin word for heart which is Cor.
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.
cordial
The Latin equivalent for "frozen heart" is cor gelidum("icy heart") or cor gelatum ("frozen heart").
Cor atrum.
The Latin word for body is corpus (gen. corporis)
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).
in hebrew: milev (mee, lev) a construct word
The Latin root word "cord" means heart. It is commonly found in words related to feelings, emotions, and relationships.