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"
The root words tempor and tempo both mean time in Latin.
The Latin word for psychology is "psychologia".
Either of the following: computatrum instrumentum computatorium The word 'computer' comes from Latin; 'computatrum' is the form used by Latinists.
Tritanis
the language is latin
ANSWER Time.
the latin word for clock is "crono" meaning time which is why it means clock
Tempus
Yes it do I study Latin all the time
ANSWER Tempor is the Latin word for "punctual, on time", but we cannot consider it a root because "to be on time" is an expression without Latin roots.
The Latin word tempus is equivalent to the English word "time".
Tempus.
tempus.
time
The word "tempo" can be traced to the Latin word tempusand the Italian word tempo for "time."
Circa and fere are Latin equivalents of the English word 'about'. The word 'fere' is used when an adverb is needed for number or time. The word 'circa' is used when a preposition of place or time is needed.
No such thing. Latin is an ancient language, thus, no flamethrowers at that time. Unless you would want to find the word "thrower" in latin. The word flame is inferno in latin.