Distrahere comes from the combination of Dis- (the adjective means wealthy, but wealth comes from underground, so as a prefix is means down or under) and traho, -ere, which means "to drag" (we get "tractor" from the Supine of this verb).
distract
your self
viv-
solus is the latin word for alone ( it is a latin root and can have endings added to it )
Fac- is the Latin root for 'you do'. From the root is formed 'facis' for 'you do', in the sense of the second person singular in the present indicative tense. Also from the same root is formed 'facitis', in the sense of the second person plural.
The word derived from the Latin root word distrahere is "distract."
distract
Distrahere - to distract
The root word for "to pull away" in Latin is "trahere." It means to pull, draw, or drag something away or towards oneself.
distra
to distract
it means to distract
latin
That is a trick question because the root phone is a greek AND a latin root.
The latin root for flexible is flex.
The Latin root of Prefer is Praeferre.
The Latin root for "nine" is "novem."