C Curriculum Explorer
English·Vocabulary·conceptual

Greek and Latin Roots for Word Meaning

Use knowledge of Greek and Latin affixes (prefixes and suffixes) and roots as clues to determine the meaning of unfamiliar words, building a bank of common roots and their meanings

Suggested ages 9–11

Open direct link

Learning journey

Your child is developing sophisticated language skills — understanding figurative language like metaphors and similes, learning word relationships through synonyms and antonyms, and using Greek and Latin word parts to figure out unfamiliar words.

Evidence of understanding

  • Identify common Greek and Latin roots in unfamiliar words and use root meaning to infer word meaning, e.g. 'aqua' (water) in aquarium/aquatic, 'dict' (say) in predict/dictionary
  • Break a multi-morpheme word into prefix + root + suffix to determine meaning, e.g. un- (not) + believe + -able = not able to be believed
  • Use knowledge of Greek-origin prefixes (auto-, tele-, micro-) and Latin-origin prefixes (inter-, trans-, sub-) to decode and define unfamiliar vocabulary in context

Assessment prompt

If Greek and Latin Roots for Word Meaning comes across an unfamiliar word containing a Greek or Latin root they recognise — like "port" in "transport" or "bio" in "biology" — can they use that to work out the meaning?

Standards alignment

L.4.4bUS · ccss-ela

L.4.4b

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects · 4

L.5.4bUS · ccss-ela

L.5.4b

Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts & Literacy in History/Social Studies, Science, and Technical Subjects · 5