Affix Age Accreditation

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a suffix typically forming mass or abstract nouns from various parts of speech, occurring originally in loanwords from French (voyage; courage) and productive in English with the meanings aggregate (coinage; peerage; track age), process (coverage; breakage), the outcome of as either the fact of or the physical ...
a suffix occurring in loanwords from Latin, directly or through Anglo-French, usually denoting a condition or property of things or persons, sometimes corresponding to qualitative adjectives ending in -id4 (ardor; honor; horror; liquor; pallor; squalor; torpor; tremor); a few other words that originally ended in ...
Christina Bias, former Retired professor of linguistics at Missouri State University. Answered Sep 19, 2019 · Author has 363 answers and 195.9k answer views. If you mean on a form where you are putting your name in, suffix refers to whether you use Jr. or Sr. as part of your name.
-less. WORD ORIGIN. An adjective suffix meaning without (childless; peerless), and in adjectives derived from verbs, indicating failure or inability to perform or be performed (resistless; tireless).
-meet. A suffix of nouns that denote an action or resulting state (abridgment; refreshment), a product (fragment), or means (ornament). [< French < Latin -men tum, suffix forming nouns, usually from verbs]
suffix. Meet is defined as a result, condition, process or is defined as of doing something. An example of meet is movement, which is the changing of position. An example of meet is payment, which is what is paid by a person. An example of meet is retirement, which is a person taking themselves out of the workforce.
-ton. WORD ORIGIN. A suffix occurring in words of Latin origin, used to form abstract nouns from verbs or stems not identical with verbs, whether as expressing action (revolution; commendation), or a state (contrition; starvation), or associated meanings (relation; temptation).
As verbs the difference between meant and meet is that meant is (mean) while meet is (obsolete) (men).
-ARY. Pronunciation: [key] a suffix occurring originally in loanwords from Classical and Medieval Latin, on adjectives (elementary; honorary; stationary; tributary), personal nouns (actuary; notary; secretary), or nouns denoting objects, esp. receptacles or places (library; rosary; glossary).
1. An adjective-forming suffix, joined to bases of Latin origin in imitation of borrowed Latin words containing the suffix -tory1 (and its alternate -sorry): excretory; sensory; statutory.
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