Seven, Setangle and sepinfection
Answered By : Harold Edward Styles CUPCAKE
The latin root "fac- or fic-" all means "make/do." Some words containing this root are facile, factory, malefactor, manufacture, and artifact.
nutrient, nutrition, nutrimetrics, nutritional
suffer sub + ferre, lit. to suffer below.
Deus means god.
Words from the root pop (Latin populi) include people, variants of popular (popularity) and variants of population (populace, to populate).
The number 'two' is the English equivalent of the Latin root syllables 'duo-'. English derivatives of the Latin root include the adjective dual; the adjective/noun duodecimal; and the nouns duet. Latin derivatives includes 'duodecim', which means loosely 'twelve' and literally 'two plus ten'; and the verb 'duplicare', which means 'to double'.
Some derivatives are aqueous, aquaduct, aquifer.
Some derivatives for the Latin word "multi" include "multiple", "multiply", and "multitude".
Some English derivatives of the Latin word 'teneo' include "retain," "contain," "tenant," and "tenacious."
Diverse is one English equivalent of the Latin root 'var-'. A Latin derivative of that root meaning is the infinitive 'variare', which means 'to diversify, vary'. Knock kneed is another equivalent. Latin derivatives of that root meaning are the adjectives 'varus', which means 'bent'; and 'varicus', which means 'straddling'.
Some are sedimentary, sedative, sedentary, sedan, and sediment
Triclinium is Latin for a dining room
Cadence, cascade, casualty, decadence.
labor, laborer
Audio, audible/inaudible, auditif/auditive, auditoire, audition, auditorium.
The root word is tude, meaning Garateful. [ Sounds weird, but it's true!! Latin is very confusing!]
The root is Greek and means 'god'. See theology, theocracy.