It's lifted straight from Latin.
That's the beauty of English. If we haven't got an appropriate word for something, then we'll just take it from a language that does. Schadenfreude is probably my favourite example.
The prefix of "aqueduct" is "aqua," which means water in Latin.
English is a Germanic language.
English
English as a Second Language (ESL) is teaching or learning English in an English speaking country (thus giving learners lots of opportunities to practice English outside the classroom). English as a Foreign Language (EFL) is teaching or learning English in a Non-English speaking country (thus learners have much fewer opportunities to practice English outside the classroom).
Bimini is in the Bahamas, where English is the official language.
Latin is so awesome! I take it as a language!Aqueduct comes from the Latin word aqua. It means water. Also, "duct" comes from the latin "Ducere", or "to carry".
The cerebral aqueduct is referred to as the aqueduct of Sylvius
La aqueduct Orange city aqueduct
It called aqueduct
The aqueduct of Segovia.
There are no perfect rhymes for the word aqueduct.
It was formerly spelled aquaduct but now it is aqueduct. So aqueduct is the correct spelling.
The longest Roman aqueduct was Constantinople.
he made the aqueduct in 1859
Bullbridge Aqueduct was created in 1794.
Elan aqueduct was created in 1904.
Prestolee Aqueduct was created in 1793.