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Here Are Several youtube.com Videos Regarding root word That I Discovered On The Web

Grades Rock Root Word Video.m4v

A school project, in which we express the importance of a good vocabulary. Written by Castillo, Sid Jackson, and Calvin Cottrell. Instrumental by Young Money. myspace.com/maxcastillohiphop

My Big fat greek wedding – Give me any word, and I show you how the root is greek…

Give me any word, and I show you how the root is greek

A History of Hebrew Part 10: The Hebrew Root System

This is a segment of a much larger video production that I am working on and am looking for feedback (positive and negative) on the layout and content. ___________________ Like a tree with its roots, trunk, branches and leaves, the Hebrew language is a system of roots and words, where one word, and its meaning is the foundation to a number of other words whose spelling and meaning are related back to that one root. As an example, the root MLK (melekh) means “rule.” This root can be used as a verb meaning to rule, or as a noun meaning a ruler, or king. Other nouns are created out of this root by adding other letters. By adding the letter Hey to the end of the root, the word malkah is formed which is a female ruler, a queen. By adding a Vav to this feminine noun, the word malukhah is formed meaning “royalty.” By adding the letters vav-tav to the end of the root, the noun malkut is formed meaning the area ruled by the ruler, the kingdom. By studying the relationship between words and their roots we can better understand the meanings of these words within their original context. Let’s take 3 English words found in English translations of the Bible; Maiden, Eternity and Secret. These three words are, from our interpretation, three very unrelated words. But let us examine the Hebrew words behind these translations. The Hebrew word for maiden is Almah, for eternity is Olam and the word for secret is Tealmah. Each of these words share the same three letters; The Ayin, the Lamed

Genocide by Raphael Lemkin

Raphael Lemkin born on June 24, 1900 was a Polish lawyer of Jewish descent. Before World War II, Lemkin studied the Armenian Genocide in depth and campaigned in the League of Nations to ban what he called “barbarity” and “vandalism”. He is best known for his work against genocide, a word he coined in 1943 from the root words genos (Greek for family, tribe or race) and -cide (Latin for killing). He first used the word in print in Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation – Analysis of Government – Proposals for Redress (1944). Lemkin was born RafaƂ Lemkin in the village of Bezwodne in Imperial Russia, now the Vawkavysk district of Belarus. Not much is known of Lemkin’s early life. He grew up in a Jewish family and was one of three children born to Joseph and Bella (Pomerantz) Lemkin. His father was a farmer and his mother a highly intellectual woman who was a painter, linguist, and philosophy student with a large collection of books on literature and history. With his mother as an influence, Lemkin mastered ten languages by the age of 14, including French, Spanish, Hebrew, Yiddish, and Russian. * Bangladesh * Bhutan * Brunei * Cambodia * China * India * Indonesia * Republic of Korea * Laos * Malaysia * Maldives * Mongolia * Myanmar * Nepal * North Korea * Pakistan * Philippines * Singapore * Sri Lanka * Thailand * Timor-Leste * Viet Nam * Taiwan * ACD * APEC * ASEAN * ASEM * EAS * ESCAP * SAARC * Other Issues Pacific * Australia * Fiji * Kiribati * Marshall