Rin- (Rhin-), Rhino- (Rhino-)

Rin- and rhino- are prefixes that denote nose. They are used in a variety of languages ​​including English, French, Spanish, Italian and many others. For example, the word “rinoceros” in English means “rhinoceros”, and “rinoceros” in Russian means the same thing.

The prefix “rin-” is used in English and French. It comes from the Latin word “rhinus”, which means “nose”. For example, in English the word “rhinoceros” means “rhinoceros”. In French, the word “rino” means “nose”, and the word “rhino” means “rhinoceros”.

The prefix “rino-” is used in Italian and Spanish. It also comes from the Latin word “rhinos”, but in these languages ​​it is pronounced “rino”. For example, in Italian the word “rinosaure” means “dinosaur”, and in Spanish the word “rinosaurio” means the same thing.



Rin/Rino is the large round part of a giraffe, the laterally flattened head of an elephant, the imposing eye of a rhinoceros and the compact snout, at the entrance to the nostril, of a musk deer. The general pattern is that a person can see objects at a greater distance, since he has better adaptation to the absence of light and the larger the eyes and cornea (precisely because it has greater curvature), the better the adaptation. Albino rhinoceroses are to blame for everything: their eyes are smaller than those of their relatives, but they