Honcho in 1947, American English means, "officer in charge," from Japanese honcho means "group leader.
germany
The etymology of a word is the source from which it was derived.
Latin.
That means the language it oringnaly was. E.g. Spaghetti, the etymology of it is Italian, because it was oringnaly a Italian word, know what I mean?
The etymology of the word "vaccine" can be traced back to the Latin term "vaccīnus," meaning "pertaining to cows," due to the early use of cowpox in vaccination.
germany
the etymology of the word ''cereal'' is from laitin
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
No, a thesaurus does not give the etymology of a word. However, the etymology can be found in a dictionary.
What is the etymology of the word persecute its for my language homework
what is the etymology of clement
Honcho (a boss/leader)
japan where it means the head of any group
The etymology of a word is the source from which it was derived.
The etymology of the word "vaccine" can be traced back to the Latin term "vaccīnus," meaning "pertaining to cows," due to the early use of cowpox in vaccination.
The word means the history of a linguist form, such as words. So; The etymology of the word salt is Latin in origin. The etymology of the word biology is Greek in origin.