Etymology of the English word examinee
the English word
examineederived from the English word
examinederived from the Old French word
examinerderived from the Latin word
examinare (weigh, examine, consider)
derived from the Latin word
examen (exam, test; apparatus; swarm; crowd; agony)
derived from the Latin word
exigere (drive out, expel; finish)
derived from the Medieval Latin word
agere (to drive; drive, urge, conduct)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*ag-using the Latin prefix
ex-derived from the Late Latin word
ex (out)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*eghsderived from the French word
examinederived from the Latin word
examinare (weigh, examine, consider)
derived from the Latin word
examen (exam, test; apparatus; swarm; crowd; agony)
derived from the Latin word
exigere (drive out, expel; finish)
derived from the Medieval Latin word
agere (to drive; drive, urge, conduct)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*ag-using the Latin prefix
ex-derived from the Late Latin word
ex (out)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*eghsusing the English suffix
-eeUsage
Word found in Modern English