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No. The first two are the roots, and not English words.

Am I not supposed to write sentences on Roots?

Many languages whose origin is European (English, Spanish, German, Italian, etc.), come from Latin and Greek. Because of that, all of them share linguistic roots (I don't know if that is the actual terminology-not an expert). So many words that start with "acri", for example, usually refer ti something that is bitter. So you can use this fact to easily remember and memorize those words.

Maybe I'm wrong, though, please correct me @majes.tytyty

Correct. In fact, that's an excellent explanation, which is a restatement of what is written in the "Introduction."

Thanks for your input.

p.s. Actually, German has few roots from Latin or Greek. French does.

These English roots came through French.

Thanks to you for the lessons. Looking fwd to be an active member of all of them. Cheers from México!

No. The roots are not words in themselves.

My bad, So I just have to frame sentences on example based words only.

"Exacerbate" is a verb. You used it as an adjective. :-(

Hope it will get correct day by day

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