The Latin word tempus is equivalent to the English word "time".
ANSWER Time.
The suffix "temp" is derived from the Latin word "tempus" meaning time. When added to a word, it typically indicates something temporary or relating to time.
The root word "temp" comes from the Latin word "tempus" meaning "time." It is commonly used in words related to time, such as "temporary" or "contemporary."
temporis is the genitive form of the neuter word tempus, which means time; occasion, opportunity.
Some English words with "tempus" root include "temporary" and "contemporary."
tempus.
The Latin word for time is "tempus." Words like temporary and temporal are English derivatives of this word.Also:aevus is a masculine Latin noun meaning "passage of time"aevum is a neuter Latin noun meaning "passage of time"hora is a feminine Latin noun meaning "hour; time; season"tempastas is a feminine noun meaning "season, time; weather, or storm"
ANSWER Time.
From Latin, "tempus," meaning "time." From that came the Italian word, "tempo," also meaning time.
Tempus
The word 'avivah' is from the Hebrew language. Its English equivalent is 'springtime'. Therefore, its Latin equivalent is 'ver', as spring; or tempus vernum, as springtime. The word-by-word translation of the latter term is the following: 'tempus' means 'time'; and 'vernum' is an adjective that means 'of spring', 'springlike', or 'vernal'.
Tempus.
The suffix "temp" is derived from the Latin word "tempus" meaning time. When added to a word, it typically indicates something temporary or relating to time.
Machinus Tempus.
Tempus (genitive: temporis).
The root word "temp" comes from the Latin word "tempus" meaning "time." It is commonly used in words related to time, such as "temporary" or "contemporary."
The Latin word for season, or seasoning, such as for food is "condumentum" The word for the season of the year is "tempus" used with the name of the season, such as "tempus hibernum" for winter. This literally means "the time of winter".