| A | B |
| MIKROS | <G. "small" |
| microbe | an organism invisible to the naked eye, especially one that causes disease |
| microcosm | a miniature world; something that resembles something else on a very small scale |
| MINUO, MINUERE, MINUI, MINUTUM | <L. "to lesson" |
| MINUS | <L. "less" |
| minuscule | extremely small |
| minutia | a small or trivial detail |
| TENUO, TENUARE, TENUAVI, TENUATUM | <L. "to make thin" |
| TENUIS | <L. "thin" |
| attenuate | to make slender or small |
| attenuate2 | to weaken; to reduce in force or value2 |
| tenuous | thin in form |
| tenuous2 | flimsy; having little substance or validity2 |
| SATIS | <L. "enough" |
| satiate | to satisfy an appetite fully; to gratify to excess |
| IMPLEO, IMPLERE, IMPLEVI, IMPLETUM | <L. "to fill" |
| PLENUS | <L. "full" |
| comply | to do as one is asked or ordered |
| implement | a tool or utensil |
| implement2 | to carry out; to put into effect2 |
| replete | well-stocked or abundantly supplied |
| replete2 | completely filled; utterly satisfied2 |
| expletive | an exclamation or oath; often obscene |