From the perfect stem of the Latin verb cado, die: cecid-
Answer 2: I think it might actually come from the Latin caedo, meaning "to cut down, kill"; 'ae' to 'i' is a fairly common linguistic change in Latin roots. Though I'm pretty sure they're related...
cide= to cut off ; to kill ex. to kill a dispute
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
"Ab" is a root from Latin, where it commonly means "away" or "from." In Greek, "apo" is a similar root that carries a similar connotation of "away" or "from."
The root word "dorm" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "dormire," which means "to sleep."
The latin root meaning for cise is to cut
cide= to cut off ; to kill ex. to kill a dispute
-cide can mean to kill and wrong/bad/evil
re is greek and latin
Francium has a Latin root. It is named after France, where it was discovered.
The Greek root for big is "mega" and the Latin root is "magnus."
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
latin
flimsy is it greek or latin
There is no Greek root vit-. It is a Latin root.
Matricide, the murder of ones mother, comes from the Latin word mater, for mother.
Latin.