'Videlicet' is the full Latin Word. It is Latin , and means ' That is to see'. or ' namely'.
See.
'Videlicet' is a Latin word, and means to 'see'. From which we have the modern shortened words ' 'video'. 'vid.' 'viz'. Caesar on conquering Egypt said 'Veni, Vidi, Vic', which in modern English is ' I came, I saw, I conquered'.
"Vid" is a slang term for a video. It's like when you're too lazy to say the whole word, so you just chop off the last three letters. It's not rocket science, honey. Just a little shortcut for the digital age.
This usually means to see.it doesn't... besides video, some examples would be helpful.vid and vis are both prefixes involving seeing: visual, video. i dont know anymore with vid
There is no root in "ponder"
There is no prefix in videos. The root is vid which means to look.
watch a youtube vid
video, vidicon, vidiots, viding, vides, vidette
VID = 494
See.
It is debatable whether video has a root word. Vid- is a root word meaning to see or view. But it comes from the Latin term Video which means to see.
yes it is!
I got my videophone from New York.
To look is spectare; to see is videre.Spectare gives us the root "spect" as in such words as respect, inspect, spectacle, spectator.Videre gives us not only "vid" as in video and provide, but also, from its past participle visus, the root "vis" as in visual and revise.
"See" is an English equivalent of the Latin root vis-. It also serves as the translation of the alternate Latin root vid-. The pronunciation will be "wihs" in Church and classical Latin.
The Latin stem "vid" means "see" or "perceive." It is commonly found in words related to vision, sight, or observation.
evidence proof of somthing that you can look at