yes
The word "thermometer" has roots in English, Modern Latin, and French. The word is a combination of the French "thermometer" and the Modern Latin "thermometrum." The word "thermometer" came about in the 17th century.
Thermometer has two roots, both Greek: thermos (hot) and metron (measure).
The Greek root "metron"means measure. The following words contain this root in them; meter geometry optometry symmetry barometer thermometer diameter centimeter anemometer
Yes, thermometer is a noun; a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a thing.
Here are three sentences using the word 'thermometer': "James used a thermometer to measure the temperature of the water." "It is important not to break the thermometer because the glass could cut you." "This thermometer is very old."
measure
Centimeter, decanters, decimeter, meter, kilometer, hectometer, millimeter
Thermometer.
A thermometer and light meter are the most useful when measuring two environmental changes.
Thermometer
Thermometer
The instrument used to measure temperature is called a thermometer.
Etymology: French: thermomètre, from Greek "thermē" = heat and the French "o" and "mètre" = meter
The word "metre" or "meter" is defined by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures (BIPM) as the distance travelled by light in free space in 1⁄299,792,458 of a second. It is a measure of length or distance. "Metres" is the plural of meter.
metropolis thermometer barometer..........
Meter = measuring instrument as in barometer, thermometer, etcMetre (or US meter) = measurement unit for distance.
thermometer