If the variant has a suffix, the nope.
Greek
The word dedicate has no roots.
Anthropology
telescope apex =)
Telescope, telescopic, telescoping
Root words are parts of words that the structure is based off of. Suffixes come after the root word. Both of these have meaning from the Greek and Latin language.
The word "neurotoxin" comes from the Latin words neuron(nerve) and toxicum (poison). The Latin words come from the Greek words neuro (cord) and toxikon pharmakon (arrow poison).
The roots of the word are originally from Arabic.
Greek
know. Shorter words always come first.
fybro roots
The word dedicate has no roots.
All words have roots. Etymology is a interesting branch of word research.
No, the word "iron" does not come from the word "irate." "Iron" has its origins in Old English "iren," which is derived from Proto-Germanic "*izaz." In contrast, "irate" comes from the Latin word "iratus," meaning angry. The two words have different etymological roots and meanings.
Anthropology
greek word is a suffix which is added in front of a word. and the suffix has a meaning. example bi = twoin = not pre = before and lot more
A base word is a word by itself, and you can add prefixes and suffixes to change the tense. ("Sing is a word by itself, but I can change it to "singing" or "singer.") A root word has no meaning on its own; you have to add suffixes and prefixes for it to mean anything at all. ("Rupt" is not a word, but I can make it "disrupt" or "erupt" or "rupture.")