Words that have "nov" meaning "nine" in them include "November" (the eleventh month in the Gregorian calendar, originally the ninth month in the Roman calendar), "nonagenarian" (a person who is between 90 and 99 years old), and "novemdecillion" (a cardinal number represented in the U.S. by 1 followed by 60 zeros).
The prefix "nov" is Latin. It comes from the Latin word "novem," meaning nine.
I know one,Novennial - novennis of 9 years
novem and novemdellicions
Actually, most words with 'nov' in them mean 'new'. It's either a Latin or Greek stem. yes that is true but there are some that begin with nov like novice,novel
nonagenarion
Ninth month Nov = prefix for nine Sept-ember = 7 Oct-ober = 8 Nov-ember = 9 Dec-ember = 10 From the Roman calendar when only 10 months in year.
non- nov-
Some Latin words that can be made are: "multum" meaning much, "amo" meaning I love, "novus" meaning new, and "omnia" meaning everything.
A example of a word with non- as a prefix meaning nine would be likeNonagon- meaning a shape with 9 sides non-smart-meaning having no knowledge
Some words that use the root word 'nov' are:NovaNovaliaNovanglianNovationNovativeNovatorNovatrixNovelInnovateNovellaNoveletteNovelistNoveltyNoviceRenovateReference: http://www.english-for-students.com/nov.html
novice
Some words that use the root word 'nov' are:NovaNovaliaNovanglianNovationNovativeNovatorNovatrixNovelInnovateNovellaNoveletteNovelistNoveltyNoviceRenovateReference: http://www.english-for-students.com/nov.html