To throw or force(Example:a projector is a mchine that throws light on a screen.)it also means to run
'-ject' means 'to throw'. It comes from the Latin word 'iacio, iacere, iaci, iactum,' or perhaps from 'iacto, iactare, iactavi, iactatus'. They mean the same thing: 'to throw'. We derive 'eject', 'subject', 'project', 'reject', 'inject', and 'interject' from this word.
Inject, reject, eject...
to throw or force also means to run
The root word "ject" originates from the Latin word "iacere," which means to throw or to cast. It is commonly used in English words like "inject" or "eject."
to throwThe root word ject means to throw. Two examples are inject and project.
The Latin root for "project" is "proiectum," which means "to throw or cast forward."
The e means 'out' and ject is from the French word 'jette' meaning throw. so eject means throw out.
Ject is the root word of subjective. This root word means to throw.
Throw
There is no root.Another thought:Believe it or not, there is a root word in interject: ject. This root word means to throw. The prefix is inter- which means between.
Rejected is derived from the Latin verb, jacere (which means to throw as in throw away or throw a spear.)