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Etymology of the English word assaultive

the English word assaultive
derived from the English word assault
derived from the Old French word assaut
derived from the Latin word assaltus
derived from the Vulgar Latin word assalire
derived from the Latin word ad (to; near; to; to; to; near)
derived from the Latin word salire (leap, jump; move suddenly; salt, salt down, preserve with salt; spurt, discharge, be ejected under force)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *sel-
derived from the Classical Latin word assilire (jump, leap)
derived from the Classical Latin word assultus (attack, assault, charge)
derived from the Classical Latin word assilire (jump, leap)
derived from the Old French word asaut
derived from the Latin word assaltus
derived from the Vulgar Latin word assalire
derived from the Latin word ad (to; near; to; to; to; near)
derived from the Latin word salire (leap, jump; move suddenly; salt, salt down, preserve with salt; spurt, discharge, be ejected under force)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *sel-
derived from the Classical Latin word assilire (jump, leap)
derived from the Classical Latin word assultus (attack, assault, charge)
derived from the Classical Latin word assilire (jump, leap)
using the English suffix -ive
derived from the French suffix -ive
derived from the Latin suffix -ivus

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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