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Chap 24 Vocabulary Derivatives

Across
A burdensome task is called "onerous" in English thanks to this Latin noun.
"Volunteer," "volition," and "voluntary," all are derived from the third principal part of a Latin verb having to do with being willing.
"Primogeniture" is the English word, derived from Latin, for a traditional system of inheritance which favors the son who was born _____.
The English words "dormant," meaning "inactive, at rest," and "dormouse," meaning "a small rodent with an exceptionally long hibernation period," come from the 2nd principal part of this Latin verb.
A "conductor," meaning a type of metal that is well suited for leading heat or electricity from one place to another, is derived, in part, from this 4th principal part of a Latin verb.
A "viaduct," a long series of arches carrying a road, comes from the Latin verb ducō, to lead, and this Latin word for a road.
This English word that means "all knowing," comes from the Latin verb "scīre," to know, and the Latin adjective meaning "all, every."
This English word for a government by elected representatives, comes from the Romans' term for their own government, a combination of their word for "matter, business," and the Latin adjective "pūblica," meaning "belonging to the people."
This English word means a kind of writing runs together.
This is a Latin and and English noun for shouting.
Stertorous breathing, in medicine, comes from the Latin verb that means, in English, to ___
Though "latration" is considered an obscure or archaic English word, no Latin student would have to look at it for long before realizing that it had to do with the sound of ____.
Down
The English words "quotidian," which means, "everyday, commonplace," comes from this Latin word.
"Potent," "potential," and "potentate," all are derived from the 3rd principal part of this Latin verb having to do with being able.
The English word "homicide," which means, "killing a person," comes, in part, from this Latin word.
These teeth get their name from the fact that they resemble the most prominent teeth of a dog.
This 4th principal part of the Latin verb "to carry" gives us the English words translate, relate, and collate.
A nihilist believes only in this English word.
If someone calls a statement "lucid," in English, they mean, approximately, that it is as clear as the ____ of day.
This Latin word for an uproar or confusion became an English word, "tumult" with almost the same spelling and meaning.
The English words, "narrative," "narrator," and "narration," all come from this 4th principal part of a Latin verb.
"Immanent domain," a legal term for the right to a parcel of land that remains in the hands of the government no matter who owns it, comes from the Latin verb that means "to ____"
If you are certifying a fact, you are making yourself ____ that it is true.
"Domicile" and "domestic" both are both derived from the Latin noun that means _____ in English.
"Forensic science," which refers to analyzing evidence that is to be used in a court case, comes from this Latin word for a marketplace or public square, which is also where trials were held in ancient Rome.