It is greek..ped- <pous=foot
Latin has greek origins,not vice versa
pedo-, paedo-, ped-, paed-, paido-, paid- (Greek: child, boy; infant)The British tend to use the spelling paed- while the United States tend to use ped-.Remember Greek ped- means "child" and the Latin ped- means "foot".
There are two prefixes spelled ped-. In words of Latin origin, such as pediment, pedicure ped- means "foot." In words of Greek origin, such as pedagogue, pediatrics, it means "child."
The root word for "ped" is the Latin word "pes" which means "foot."
No, pedestrian doesn't have a prefix. Its root word is ped which means foot or feet.
the root ped or pod means foot.e.g.bipedtripodpedalpodiatrist aka chiropodistpedometerpedicurecentipedearthropodOk ped means foot and pod means foot i hope that helped!!Answered by:peacelove2622 ( the top one was no my answer with the dots )
In words that come from Greek the prefix ped- stands for "child."
The root ped has two meanings, one in Greek and the other is Latin. Ped in greek means child, as in pedagogy or pediatrics, while in Latin it means foot, as in pedestrian or pedal
in latin, it means foot. but in greek, it means child. weir difference, yeah?
Pedicure
pedo-, paedo-, ped-, paed-, paido-, paid- (Greek: child, boy; infant)The British tend to use the spelling paed- while the United States tend to use ped-.Remember Greek ped- means "child" and the Latin ped- means "foot".
foot
Pedis is the latin word for foot.
pedalbipedal
There are two prefixes spelled ped-. In words of Latin origin, such as pediment, pedicure ped- means "foot." In words of Greek origin, such as pedagogue, pediatrics, it means "child."
pile, ped (Latin for "foot"), piled
The root word for "ped" is the Latin word "pes" which means "foot."
Bipedal is the word for an animal that walks on two feet.