Grow
"Population" is a word with the Latin stem "pop," which comes from the Latin word "populus" meaning people or community.
It is the Latin, videre, to see. From that you get vise.
The word "verbatim" has the Latin stem "verbum," which means "word." "Verbatim" means to repeat word for word, or exactly as spoken or written.
The Latin word "to send" is mittere. Two forms of this word have provided roots for English words, the present stem mitt- (as in "transmit" and "intermittent") and the participle stem miss- (as in "transmission" and "intermission").
Luna is the stem word for 'lunatic'. The word is a Latin noun that means 'moon'. The insane were believed to have been affected adversely by the moon.
"Population" is a word with the Latin stem "pop," which comes from the Latin word "populus" meaning people or community.
Stipes would refer to a stem of an apple, etc...
It is the Latin, videre, to see. From that you get vise.
The word "verbatim" has the Latin stem "verbum," which means "word." "Verbatim" means to repeat word for word, or exactly as spoken or written.
In Latin, the word 'mens" means mind.
The Latin word "to send" is mittere. Two forms of this word have provided roots for English words, the present stem mitt- (as in "transmit" and "intermittent") and the participle stem miss- (as in "transmission" and "intermission").
Luna is the stem word for 'lunatic'. The word is a Latin noun that means 'moon'. The insane were believed to have been affected adversely by the moon.
Stems from the Latin word lībertās or līber which means free.
The root stem of the word "mercury" is "mercur-", which is derived from the Latin word "mercurius" referring to the Roman god Mercury.
this stem comes from the Latin word hortus which means "garden"
You take the stem of the word then you apply the case endingsEX.SingularAquaAquaeAquaeAquamAquaPlural
The Latin stem may be defined as the base in Latin from which a given word in Latin or in any other language is derived. For example, 'audi-' is the Latin stem to the Latin noun 'audientia', which means 'attention, hearing or listening'; the Latin verb 'audire', which means 'to hear or listen'; the Latin noun 'auditorium', which means a 'hall for listening'; and the Latin noun 'auditus', which means 'the sense of hearing'. It also is the stem to the English language words 'auditor' and 'auditorium'.