It comes from "wolf" and the archaic word "wer" meaning "man". A werewolf is literally a wolf-man.
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
The origin is from french
The origin of the word calliope: from Greek word: kalliope; meaning "beautiful voiced"
The answer is it's a british word origin. The word was orriginaly made by the English society
The origin is Greek
The Roman word for werewolf is lycanthrope
Those letters will spell werewolf.
Yes, the word "werewolf" is a noun, a word for a creature in folklore; a word for a person (a thing?).
There is a Scottish werewolf that is called a "wulver."
The modern English word werewolf derives from a combination of Old English wer (a man) with wulf (a wolf). The word wer is very distantly linked to Latin vir (a man) but the origin of the word is definitely Germanic, not Latin.
the latin word for werewolf is versipellis.
werewolves
Lycanthrope is a word better known as werewolf which is from the Greek language. Lycanthropy is the ability for a human to change their appearance into becoming a werewolf. One can find more history on the word lycanthropy by researching the word werewolf at Wikipedia.
werewolf
You would cal a werewolf Amarak, which is the word for wolf, but from context you would understand it to be someone who's spirit animal is wolf.
Werewolves are not part of Gaelic folklore - there is no word for it.
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.