Prae- is one Latin root that means 'in front of, occurring before'. Pro- is another. Either way, both also may function as prepositions in a sentence.
Yes, it is. It's composed of "prae" (before, in front of) and "fixere" (if you want so... to fix)... so a prefix is something you put before a word...
Usually a Prefix is an add on that goes before a word. E.g. Dehydrated. De- is the prefix and hydrated is the word that de- was added on to.
The prefix "ante-" comes from Latin, meaning "before."
"Antebellum" is a Latin word that means "before the war." It is commonly used in English to describe the period before the American Civil War.
The root word "cad" comes from the Latin word "cadere," which means "to fall" or "to happen." It is commonly found in English words related to falling or occurring, such as "cascade" or "accident."
Yes. The prefix pre- comes from Latin. It means before, in advance of, or in front of.
in vivo
Yes, it is. It's composed of "prae" (before, in front of) and "fixere" (if you want so... to fix)... so a prefix is something you put before a word...
"pro tum" means "Before then.""pro" means: before, in front of, on behalf of, in return for, instead of, for, as."tum" means: then, at that time, thereupon, in the next place.
Triennial, from Latin "triennium".
Usually a Prefix is an add on that goes before a word. E.g. Dehydrated. De- is the prefix and hydrated is the word that de- was added on to.
a priori
Congenital
Previously means "existing or occurring before in time or order" and fits the best interpretation of the question I can manage.
Anno Domini is in the year of our Lord. I don't think that B.C. is in Latin. It means before Christ. Before Christ in Latin, is Ante Christus, which is NOT B.C.
it means door (front door) 1st declension
It's the Latin of B.C. It means "before Christ".