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Word Roots

2 roots • 8 words

GRAV

Root Meaning:

GRAV comes from the Latin word meaning “heavy, weighty, serious.” Gravity is, of course, what makes things heavy, and without it there wouldn't be any life on earth, since nothing would stay on earth at all. This doesn't stop us from yelling in outrage when the familiar laws of gravity cause something to drop to the floor and break.

Etymology:

Latin
4 words derived from this root

Words from this root:

grave

/ɡreɪv/
Definition:
(1) Requiring serious thought or concern. (2) Serious and formal in appearance or manner.
Example:
We realized that the situation was grave and that the slightest incident could spark all-out war.
Explanation:
*Gravity* has a familiar physical meaning but also a nonphysical meaning— basically “seriousness.” Thus, something *grave* possesses gravity. You can refer to the gravity of a person's manner, though public figures today seem to have a lot less gravity than they used to have. Or you can talk about a grave situation, as in the example sentence. But even though Shakespeare makes a pun on *grave* when a dying character talks about being buried the next day (“Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man”), the word meaning “hole for burying a body” isn't actually related.

gravitas

/ˈɡrævɪtɑːs/
Definition:
Great or very dignified seriousness.
Example:
The head of the committee never failed to carry herself with the gravitas she felt was appropriate to her office.
Explanation:
This word comes to us straight from Latin. Among the Romans, gravitas was thought to be essential to the character and functions of any adult (male) in authority. Even the head of a household or a low-level official would strive for this important quality. We use *gravitas* today to identify the same solemn dignity in men and women, but it seems to come easier in those who are over 60, slow-moving—and a bit overweight.

gravitate

/ˈɡrævɪˌteɪt/
Definition:
To move or be drawn toward something, especially by natural tendency or as if by an invisible force.
Example:
On hot evenings, the town's social life gravitated toward the lakefront, where you could stroll the long piers eating ice cream or dance at the old Casino.
Explanation:
To gravitate is to respond, almost unconsciously, to a force that works like *gravity* to draw things steadily to it as if by their own weight. Thus, young people gravitate toward a role model, moths gravitate to a flame, a conversation might gravitate toward politics, and everyone at a party often gravitates to the bar.

aggravate

/ˈæɡrəˌveɪt/
Definition:
(1) To make (an injury, problem, etc.) more serious or severe. (2) To annoy or bother.
Example:
She went back to the soccer team before the knee was completely healed, which naturally aggravated the injury.
Explanation:
Since the *grav-* root means basically “weighty or serious,” the original meaning of *aggravate* was “to make more serious.” A bad relationship with your parents can be aggravated by marrying someone who nobody likes, for example, or a touchy trade relationship between two countries can be aggravated by their inability to agree on climate-change issues. Depression can be aggravated by insomnia—and insomnia can be aggravated by depression. But when most people use *aggravate* today, they employ its “annoy” sense, as in “What really aggravates my dad is having to listen to that TV all day long.”

LEV

Root Meaning:

LEV comes from the Latin adjective levis, meaning “light,” and the verb levare, meaning “to raise or lighten.” So a lever is a bar used to lift something, by means of leverage. And levitation is the magician's trick in which a body seems to rise into the air by itself.

Etymology:

Latin
4 words derived from this root

Words from this root:

alleviate

/əˈliːviˌeɪt/
Definition:
To lighten, lessen, or relieve, especially physical or mental suffering.
Example:
Cold compresses alleviated the pain of the physical injury, but only time could alleviate the effect of the insult.
Explanation:
Physical pain or emotional anguish, or a water shortage or traffic congestion, can all be alleviated by providing the appropriate remedy. But some pain or anguish or shortage or congestion will remain: to alleviate is not to cure.

elevation

/ˌɛlɪˈveɪʃən/
Definition:
(1) The height of a place. (2) The act or result of lifting or raising someone or something.
Example:
Her doctor is concerned about the elevation of her blood pressure since her last visit.
Explanation:
When you're hiking, you may be interested in knowing the highest elevation you'll be reaching. Psychologists use the term “mood elevation” to mean improvement in a patient's depression, and some leg ailments require elevation of the limb, usually so that it's higher than the heart for part of each day. *Elevation* can also mean “promotion” ; thus, a vice president may be *elevated* to president, or a captain may be elevated to admiral.

cantilever

/ˈkæntɪˌliːvər/
Definition:
A long piece of wood, metal, etc., that sticks out from a wall to support something above it.
Example:
The house's deck, supported by cantilevers, jutted out dramatically over the rocky slope, and looking over the edge made him dizzy.
Explanation:
Cantilevers hold up a surface or room without themselves being supported at their outer end. Many outdoor balconies are *cantilevered*, and theater balconies may be as well. A cantilevered bridge may have a huge span (as long as 1,800 feet) built out on either side of a single large foundation pier. Architects sometimes use cantilevered construction to produce dramatic effects; Frank Lloyd Wright's “Fallingwater” house, which extends out over a rocky river, is a famous example. But the Grand Canyon's “ Skywalk” has become perhaps the best-known piece of cantilevered construction in America.

levity

/ˈlɛvɪti/
Definition:
Lack of appropriate seriousness.
Example:
The Puritan elders tried to ban levity of all sorts from the community's meetings, but found it increasingly difficult to control the younger generation.
Explanation:
Levity originally was thought to be a physical force exactly like gravity but pulling in the opposite direction, like the helium in a balloon. As recently as the 19th century, scientists were still arguing about its existence. Today *levity* refers only to lightness in manner. To stern believers of some religious faiths, levity is often regarded as almost sinful. But the word, like its synonym *frivolity*, now has an old-fashioned ring to it and is usually used only half-seriously.

Audio Learning

Unit 1 - Split 4

Conversation Script

Follow along with Alex and Ben

Alex
Welcome to Word Builders, the podcast that puts some weight behind your vocabulary. I’m Alex.
Ben
And I’m Ben.
Alex
Ben, let me ask you something. What do a feather and a difficult political situation have in common?
Ben
A feather and a difficult political situation? One is light, the other is... heavy. I feel like you're setting me up for a discussion about opposites.
Alex
You've caught on perfectly! Today, we're exploring two Latin roots that are perfect opposites: GRAV, meaning “heavy” or “serious,” and LEV, meaning “light.”
Ben
Heavy and light. I’m ready. Where are we starting? With the heavy stuff?
Alex
We are. Let's begin with GRAV. G-R-A-V. It's the root of the word *gravity*, the force that literally gives things weight and keeps our feet on the ground.
Ben
So our first word must be related to seriousness. Is it the word grave?
Alex
It is indeed. Grave, G-R-A-V-E. It has two main meanings: requiring serious thought or concern, and being serious or formal in manner. For example, we realized that the situation was grave and that the slightest incident could spark all-out war.
Ben
Now I have to ask. Is this related to a grave in a cemetery? The material mentions a Shakespeare pun about it.
Alex
That's the most common question, and the answer is no, they aren't related at all! It's just a coincidence. Shakespeare loved puns, so when a dying character says, "Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man," he was playing on both the seriousness of death and the hole in the ground.
Ben
That's a great little piece of trivia. Okay, what's next in our serious lineup?
Alex
Our next word is gravitas. G-R-A-V-I-T-A-S.
Ben
Gravitas. I've heard this used to describe politicians or leaders. It means more than just being serious, right?
Alex
Exactly. It's a great or very dignified seriousness. The word comes to us directly from Latin, where it was seen as an essential quality for any man in authority. We might say, the head of the committee never failed to carry herself with the gravitas she felt was appropriate to her office.
Ben
The text says it seems to come easier to those who are over 60 and a bit overweight. That's a funny observation.
Alex
It is, isn't it? It captures that sense of slow, deliberate, weighty dignity that the word implies.
Ben
Okay, so if gravitas is a quality, what's a word for being drawn towards something serious?
Alex
That leads us to our verb: gravitate. G-R-A-V-I-T-A-T-E. To gravitate is to move or be drawn toward something, as if by an invisible force like gravity.
Ben
So it’s not a physical pull, but a natural tendency?
Alex
Precisely. The example sentence is a great visual: on hot evenings, the town's social life gravitated toward the lakefront. People just naturally ended up there. In the same way, you might find that a conversation gravitates toward politics.
Ben
Or everyone at a party gravitates to the kitchen. I know that force well.
Alex
Our last heavy word is aggravate. A-G-G-R-A-V-A-T-E.
Ben
I know this one. It means to annoy or bother someone, right? Like, "Stop aggravating your sister."
Alex
That is the most common way we use it today. But its original meaning, coming from GRAV, is to make a problem more serious or more weighty. For instance, she went back to the soccer team before the knee was completely healed, which naturally aggravated the injury.
Ben
Ah, so it made the injury more severe, or "heavier." The "annoy" meaning came later?
Alex
Yes. Making a problem more serious is the primary definition. Annoying your dad by playing the TV too loud is the secondary one, though it's probably the one we hear most often.
Ben
Okay, that was a lot of heavy and serious stuff. Can we lighten the mood now?
Alex
I was hoping you'd say that. Let's move to our second root, LEV, from the Latin word *levis*, meaning “light,” and *levare*, "to raise or lighten."
Ben
LEV. This is where we get words like *lever*, for lifting things, and *levitation*, the magic trick.
Alex
You've got it. Our first word is alleviate. A-L-L-E-V-I-A-T-E.
Ben
To alleviate sounds like making something lighter, like a burden.
Alex
That's the perfect way to describe it. It means to lighten, lessen, or relieve, especially physical or mental suffering. For example, cold compresses alleviated the pain of the physical injury.
Ben
So, does alleviating a problem solve it completely?
Alex
Not necessarily, and that's the key point. To alleviate is not to cure. It makes the problem less severe—it lessens traffic congestion or alleviates a water shortage—but some of the problem likely remains.
Ben
That makes sense. What's next?
Alex
Elevation. E-L-E-V-A-T-I-O-N.
Ben
Elevation is height, like the elevation of a mountain.
Alex
That's its primary meaning. But it also means the act of lifting or raising something. So a doctor might be concerned about the elevation of her blood pressure, or a patient might require the elevation of a leg. It can even mean a promotion, like a vice president being elevated to president.
Ben
So it can be literal height, a physical raising, or a rise in status. Very versatile.
Alex
Our next word is a bit more technical: cantilever. C-A-N-T-I-L-E-V-E-R.
Ben
Cantilever. That sounds like an engineering term. What is it?
Alex
It's a long piece of wood or metal that sticks out from a wall to support something above it, without being supported at the far end. Think of a theater balcony or a dramatic deck that juts out over a cliff.
Ben
Oh, so it’s a structure that seems to be floating, in a way. The material mentions Frank Lloyd Wright's "Fallingwater" house.
Alex
Exactly. That house extends out over a river, held up by cantilevers. It creates a "light," floating effect, which connects back to the root LEV.
Ben
That's a very cool architectural connection. Okay, what's our last word?
Alex
Our final word is levity. L-E-V-I-T-Y.
Ben
Levity. If it comes from 'light', it must mean lightness in some way.
Alex
It does, but specifically, it means a lack of appropriate seriousness. It's bringing lightness into a situation that is supposed to be serious. For example, the Puritan elders tried to ban levity of all sorts from their meetings.
Ben
So it’s like telling a joke at a funeral. That would be considered levity.
Alex
A perfect example. What's truly fascinating is that scientists once debated the existence of levity as a real physical force that was the opposite of gravity, pulling things upward.
Ben
You're kidding! They thought there was a real force called levity?
Alex
They did! Today, of course, the word only refers to lightness in manner, and it sounds a little old-fashioned, but it has a great history.
Ben
Amazing. Time for a quick summary?
Alex
Let's do it. From the Latin root GRAV, meaning heavy or serious...
Ben
We had grave, meaning serious. Gravitas, for dignified seriousness. Gravitate, to be drawn toward something. And aggravate, to make a problem more serious or to annoy.
Alex
And from the Latin root LEV, meaning light...
Ben
We had alleviate, to lighten a burden. Elevation, meaning height or the act of raising. Cantilever, a projecting support. And levity, a lack of appropriate seriousness.
Alex
From heavy situations to a lighthearted mood, these roots have us covered.
Ben
That was a fantastic journey through opposites. Thanks for listening to Word Builders!
Alex
Join us next time for more.
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