The word comes from Latin and the proper usage is listed below.
Alumnus:(male singular)
Alumni: (male plural)
Alumna : (female singular)
Alumnae: (female plural)
A group of men and women together take the masculine alumni.
The prefix "ped" is of Latin origin. It comes from the Latin word "pes" which means "foot".
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
Yes, the keyword "etymology" is of Greek origin, not Latin.
The root word "dorm" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "dormire," which means "to sleep."
Alumnus is singular; alumni is plural. The origin of the word alumnus is Latin and uses the Latin plural form.
greek word - alumni & reunion
Alumna is a Latin word. (It is the feminine form of alumnus, plural alumni).And the feminine Latin plural of alumna is alumnae.
Flex a greek or latin
re is greek and latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
These is neither Latin nor Greek. These is English.
Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.Probability is derived from Latin, not Greek.
Albert H. Gordon Gen. Joseph Warren (please see the Wikipedia entry on Roxbury Latin for a much more comprehensive listing of famous alumni--there's a huge number).
latin
Both Latin and Greek. The Latin the word is Aerius meaning 'airy' and from Greek Aerios meaning 'of the air'
is heptathalon a greek or latin word