Vacuas is the Latin word for empty. Inanis, which means void and vacuus, which means deserted are closely related to empty.
Vac
The latin root vac means empty
'color' itself is the Latin root, 'Chrom' is the greek root
Assuming you mean cred- as in incredible, credibility, etc., it comes from the Latin word credere (to believe).
It means time, chrono (χρονο). It's Greek.
Pulse has no root word. It is from the Latin pulsus which is from Latin pellere (to set in motion by beating or striking) and the suffix -tus (the suffix for action verbs).
the latin root mob means empty
The root that means 'severe' is from the ancient, classical Greek and Latin languages. That root is auster- in Latin, and austeros in Greek. From that root derive the Latin adjective 'austerus', which means 'severe'; and the Latin noun 'austeritas', which means 'severeness, severity'.
The root mem is not greek, but latin. It means 'mind'.
It's not a Latin root, it's Greek. Angelos in Greek simply means messenger.
Vastare is the Latin root word of 'devastate'. The Latin verb means 'to empty, make empty'. It also may be translated loosely as 'to prey upon'.
The latin root vac means empty
'color' itself is the Latin root, 'Chrom' is the greek root
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
its actually latin. the latin root imag means likeness. EX; imagine, imagination
It means World/Universe
it means sugar in latin or greek
Philia isn't a Latin root word. It's Greek. It means fear.