Oh, dude, the root "miss" means to fail to hit or reach something, like when you throw a ball and totally whiff it. It's also used in words like "missile," which is basically a fancy way of saying "flying thing that doesn't hit its target." So, yeah, miss is all about not quite making the mark.
The root of missile is miss-, meaning "sent" (c.f. missive, mission).
missilemissionpermissionpermit (miss is actually mitto, mittere, missi)
There is no root in "ponder"
I miss you now
Incred is not a root word. It is a root with a negating prefix.
This latin root, miss and mit means to send something. Such as the word transmit, dismiss, admit, and so much more.
If you mean miss as in "I miss you", the 4 principle parts are: present active: dēsīderō (I miss___) present infinitive: dēsīderāre (To miss) perfect active: dēsīderāvī (I missed ___) supine: dēsīderātum (Noun, something that is . wished for.) If you mean miss as in, not hitting a target: Present active: requīrō present infinitive: requīrere perfect active: requīsīvī supine: requīsītum
re is greek and latin
The Latin root for commission is "committere," which means "to entrust."
If you mean miss as in "I miss you", the 4 principle parts are: present active: dēsīderō (I miss___) present infinitive: dēsīderāre (To miss) perfect active: dēsīderāvī (I missed ___) supine: dēsīderātum (Noun, something that is . wished for.) If you mean miss as in, not hitting a target: Present active: requīrō present infinitive: requīrere perfect active: requīsīvī supine: requīsītum
The root of missile is miss-, meaning "sent" (c.f. missive, mission).
missilemissionpermissionpermit (miss is actually mitto, mittere, missi)
miss holmes mean loveable and nice
It means miss as in miss brown or miss Washington
I will miss you
it is not a greek root or any root
sqrt(324) = ±1818the square root is 18