"Antediluvian", for one, meaning 'existing before the Great Flood.'
"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 prefix "ante-" comes from Latin, meaning "before."
The prefix 'ante-' means before. It comes from the Latin word 'ante', which means before. An example of this is the word anteroom, which is a smaller room that comes before a larger room.
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
Ante is the Latin word for before and delictum is Latin for offense. The phrase ante delictum means before the offense.
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
The Latin translation for 'ante' is before.
Before.
one of the Latin words for "before" is ante
The Latin word ante meridiem refers to "before noon" in English language.
"Population" is a word with the Latin stem "pop," which comes from the Latin word "populus" meaning people or community.
It is from the Latin Ante Christum
Stipes would refer to a stem of an apple, etc...
Qui ante? in Latin is "Who before?" in English.
It is the Latin, videre, to see. From that you get vise.