Man, as in male person, comes neither from Greek nor Latin, It has a Germanic root. Manu is more difficult without a context. There is an oceanic word manu which means bird. Manu is also a Hindi word for the first man, and derives from Sanskrit. (The Germanic languages and Sanskrit both derive from Indo-European). Manu, as short for Manuel is a Spanish/Portuguese name deriving from Latin and late Greek, but of course there are other similar names such as the Hebrew Emmanuel. The many English words beginning with manu- such as manual, derive from the Latin manus, meaning hand.
"Man" is of neither Greek nor Latin descent. It is Germanic and Norse in origin. The Latin for man is vir or homo; the Greek is Άνθρωπος (anthropos).
manu tenēre
Vir is the Latin equivalent of the Greek word ἄνθρωπος (ánthrōpos). Both masculine singular nouns translate as "man" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "AN-thro-pos" in Greek and "weer" in Latin.
Latin Greek. It means study of man.
according to hindu mythology manu was the first man on earth apart from gods. Thus they follow lwas of manu as he is the great father of all man kind.
The prefix "man" or "manu" typically refers to something related to humans or mankind. It can also imply characteristics such as being done by hand or by humans.
man-, manu-
the difference is that mancity represents man city and manu represents manu but they are alomost the same but there different teams.
Flex a greek or latin
re is greek and latin
These is neither Latin nor Greek. These is English.