The syllable 'synth-' is a prefix, not a root. Its correct form is 'syn-'. It traces its origins back to the ancient, classical Latin language, and the even earlier, ancient, classical Greek language. Either way, the English equivalent is found in the preposition with.
The Latin root for reciprocal is "re-" meaning back or again, and the Greek root is "pro" meaning back or again.
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
"Agri-" is a Latin root meaning "field" or "farm."
The Greek root for "matri" is "mater" meaning mother, while the Latin root is "matr" also meaning mother. The Greek root for "arch" is "archos" meaning ruler or chief, while the Latin root is "archi" meaning chief or principal.
The Latin root for "impartial" is "im-" meaning "not" or "without," paired with "partialis" meaning "biased." The Greek root is "a-" meaning "without" or "not," combined with "pártis" meaning "to divide" or "to share."
The Latin root for reciprocal is "re-" meaning back or again, and the Greek root is "pro" meaning back or again.
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
"Agri-" is a Latin root meaning "field" or "farm."
The root is the Latin "vīvere," meaning "to live."
Graph is a Greek root meaning "to write."
hyper is a greek root word meaning over-. υπερ- (hyper-)
The Greek root for "matri" is "mater" meaning mother, while the Latin root is "matr" also meaning mother. The Greek root for "arch" is "archos" meaning ruler or chief, while the Latin root is "archi" meaning chief or principal.
It's not a Latin root, it's Greek. Angelos in Greek simply means messenger.
The Latin root for "impartial" is "im-" meaning "not" or "without," paired with "partialis" meaning "biased." The Greek root is "a-" meaning "without" or "not," combined with "pártis" meaning "to divide" or "to share."
Latin (portus), meaning harbor. Latin porto, meaning carry.
"Fract" is a Latin root word, derived from the Latin verb "frangere" meaning "to break."
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