Diamond Enthusiast

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I'm not exactly sure how to interpret your question, jusork, but I'll assume you mean what root occurs in the most English words, and that by "root" you are prepared to be broad minded and to accept as examples of the root cases where it no longer bears much if any resemblance to any free-standing English word.
The English word stand occurs quite recognizably in a large number of derivatives, including understand, withstand, standout, standby, and many, many others, some of them hyphenated. But if we consider the Indo-European root sta, of which English stand is a reflex, there are almost quite literally countless others. The list includes: stay, stall, starling, steed, stud, stool, oust, rest, arrest, stanch, stanza, stative, stator, circumstance, constant, contrast, substance, distant, distance, cost, extant, existence, instant, obstacle, stable, station, stationary, obstetric, stage, and prostitute (from Latin "to cause to stand forth"), to name just some. Most of the words above can have derivational and declensional endings of a wide variety, which is one reason I would hesitate to even try to count how many separate "words" there are.
In any case, it is a lot, and offhand I can't think of another Indo-European root which has been so productive in English.
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