The word astronomy (from the Ancient_Greekwords astron (ἄστρον), "star" and -nomy from nomos (νόμος), "law" or "culture") literally means "law of the stars" (or "culture of the stars" depending on the translation).
NOTE: THIS WAS COPIED DIRECTLY FROM WIKIPEDIA
The Greek root word of astronomy is "astron," which means star.
ἀστρονομία
Yes, the word "astronomy" is derived from the Latin word "astronomia," which comes from the Greek words "astron" (star) and "nomos" (law) and translates to "law of the stars."
The Greek root word "astron" means universe.example: astronomy;astronaut
The original language for astronomy is from Greek
Astronomy is a long word.
Astronomy and astronaut have the root 'Astros' which means star.
Aratus has written: 'Ad illustrem et inclytum principem Eduardum Semaurum, Hertfordiae Comitem, & Bellocampo Baronem' 'Phaenomena' -- subject(s): Ancient Astronomy, Astronomy, Astronomy, Ancient, Astronomy, Greek, Constellations, Didactic poetry, Greek, Early works to 1800, Greek Astronomy, Greek Didactic poetry, Planets, Poetry, Translations into French, Weather 'Arati Phaenomena, recensuit et fontium testimoniorumque notis prolegominis indicibus instruxit Ernestus Maass' 'Hvg. Grotii Batavi Syntagma Arateorvm' -- subject(s): Greek Astronomy, Weather, Folklore
My brother is studying astronomy.
Urania was a Muse goddess of astronomy. Atlas and Hermes are also astronomy gods.
The Greek root word "astro" means star. It is commonly used in English to refer to celestial bodies and celestial phenomena, such as astronomy (the study of celestial objects) and astrophysics (the branch of astronomy that deals with the physics of the universe).
No, the noun astronomy is an uncountable noun, a word that can't be separated into countable parts. The word astronomy is an abstract noun for a concept.