The derivative for the latin word agricola is agriculture.
Agriculture refers to farmland and crops and things of that nature which in this case are based on the meaning of agricola-farmer.
Actually that's not right. Agriculture comes from the word ager, meaning field (ager, agri, m., field). I don't know any derivatives of agricola, but I know agriculture isn't one.
agrarian, agriology, pilgrim, perigrinate. you're welcome. and agriculture IS a derivative. my teacher said so.
'Agricola', from which we get the word 'agriculture'.
The derivatives for the Latin word "simia" include "simian" in English and "singe" in French.
Some derivatives are aqueous, aquaduct, aquifer.
Some derivatives for the Latin word "multi" include "multiple", "multiply", and "multitude".
The derivatives of the Latin word "vale" include "valeo" meaning "to be strong" or "to be well" and "valediction" meaning "a farewell."
benign, benignant
redirection
nautical
The Latin word agricola means "farmer" in English. To say farmers (as in the plural form) you add -ae to agricol. So, to say farmers you say "agricolae."
Some English derivatives of the Latin word 'teneo' include "retain," "contain," "tenant," and "tenacious."
The English derivatives of the Latin word "sedet" include "sedentary" and "sediment."
The latin word for 'new' is 'novus'. Derivatives from this latin word include novelty, novel, etc. Hope this helps!