apprehensive LOL
redundant, abundant
The word does not have a root word, it is a root word itself for the word intricacy, which is the noun form of the word. It may have Latin roots, and that may be the answer you're looking for is the Latin root it comes from. We get many English words from Latin.
In English, the two primary root words for 'new' are the Greek neos and the Latin novus.We see examples of the Greek in words like 'neolithic' - (Gk neos 'new' + Gk lithos 'stone') and 'neonate' (Gk neos 'new' + Latin nat- 'born').The Latin novus lives in words like 'renovate' - (Latin renovare 'make new again') on 'innovate' (Latin innovare 'make new, alter').
The Latin root word "pug" means "to fight." You may find this root utilized in many English words today such as pugnacious, repugnant, and impugn.
The Latin root for the words tenuous and attenuate is the word tenuis meaning thin.
The Latin root "prehendar" means "to seize" or "to grasp." It is not directly related to nervousness or fear; rather, it pertains to the act of taking hold of something physically or metaphorically.
redundant, abundant
Many English words do not have Spanish root words, such as:algebrabuttcowdirteggfatghosthairiglooJewishkhakilumpmostnextplumqueenracesiptickleupvastwitchxrayyodzoom
Nearly is the English equivalent of the Latin root 'pen-'. A Latin derivative of the Latin root is the adverb 'paene', which also means 'nearly'. An English derivative is the adjective 'penultimate', which means 'nearly last' or 'next to last'.
annual anniversary superannuation
Breathe
ludere=to play illusion collusion delusion radix=root radical
The English "superfluous" comes from the Latin superwhich means over and fluo which means to flow
From the Latin fructus, meaning fruit
It's what "are" some words with the Latin root word arm, not "is" Start by grasping the english language, then tackle Latin. Dummy What be a good place to buy drugs? I is funny.
Division or section is the English meaning of the Latin root 'temp-'. From this root come the Latin noun 'tempus' for time, and the English noun 'temperature'. The Latin nouns 'tempus' and 'templum', which means 'a section, a part cut off', are related to the Greek word 'temenos'. But only the Latin language, not the Greek, is the source for the root 'temp-'.
the answer is principio, but I want to know if there are other English words that contain that latin root?