Sign
The word "book" traces its root to German, not Latin, but "note" comes from the Latin word nota, which means "to mark or note".
The latin root for flexible is flex.
what is the latin root for apparently
No, there is not a latin root meaning for fog.
the latin root meaning for cent is a hundered,the latin root for cap is to take seieze or hold,and last is dur wich the latin root is dur wich means hard
The Latin root "sign" means "mark" or "token." It is used in various English words related to symbols, indications, or gestures.
The root word of "annotate" is "note", which comes from the Latin word "notare" meaning "to mark".
The Latin word signare means "to mark; to designate". It is based on the noun signum, "a sign", from the Proto-Indo-European root *sekw-, "point out"
manus= singular (hand) manus (with a long mark over the u)= plural (hands)
The word "book" traces its root to German, not Latin, but "note" comes from the Latin word nota, which means "to mark or note".
De- and notare are the Latin roots of 'denotation'. The prefix 'de-' means 'from'. The infinitive 'notare' means 'to distinguish, mark'.
If you're asking what Latin word the word 'sign' is derived from, it's signum ("a mark, sign, token").
latin
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
The Latin root for "nine" is "novem."
what is the latin root for apparently
The Latin root for "people" is "populus."