Circum means around. This was one of my stems.
The concept of the Pokémon universe, in both the video games and the general fictional world of Pokémon, stems from the hobby of insect collecting.
Polis doesn't have any wors stems! polis is actually a word stem itself polis means city. for example police has polis in it as a word stem!
1. Roman letters- with thick and thin stems; 2. Poster style- bold and even stems; 3. Script style- connected and slanted; 4. Unusual or trademark- copyrighted and new font styles;
the eyes on the pumpkin are upside down, there is a ghost on the left side of the left puzzle, one of the stems are a different color, one of the stems triangle is a different coloring of the triangle on the pumpkins is a different colour and there is more but just keep on clicking randomly anywhere and you will probably pass
Stems from the Latin word lībertās or līber which means free.
The stems in the word "carnivorous" are "carni-" and "-vorous." "Carni-" is derived from the Latin word "carnis," meaning flesh or meat, while "-vorous" comes from the Latin word "vorare," meaning to devour. When combined, these stems form the word "carnivorous," which describes an organism that primarily feeds on flesh.
It stems from the Latin word Nigrum which means black.
The stem of "ridiculous" is "ridicule." It comes from the Latin word "ridiculus," which means "laughable" or "mocking."
The origin of the word provided is early fifteenth century Latin. The Latin word it stems from is providere. It means to look ahead, supply or prepare.
Spanish stems from Latin. The Latin canto means "to sing" and libri is "book" - canta libre translates as "songbook" or "hymnal."
Vaca is the Spanish and Portuguese word for cow it stems from the Latin vacca.
the English alphabet stems from Latin
The word "fatigue" is derived from the Latin word "Fatigatio," which has the same meaning.
It stems from Latin 'serius' meaning grave and important
They're different languages.
Religion has two possible etymologies:I may come from the Latin word prefix re- (again) combined with the verb legere (to read), so it means "to read again".Another possibility is that it stems from the verb religare which means to bind fast or commit, in the sense of an obligation.Both make sense.