2. WHAT IS A ROOT?
A root, as its name suggests, is a word or
word part from which other words
grow, usually through the addition
of prefixes and suffixes.
The root of the word vocabulary, for
example, is voc, a Latin root meaning
"word" or "name." This root also
appears in the words advocacy,
convocation, evocative,
vocal, and vociferous.
3. EXAMPLES:
ROOT MEANING EXAMPLES
-ast(er)-(G) star asteroid, astronomy
-audi- (L) hear audible, audience
-auto- (G) self automatic, autopsy
-bene- (L) good benefit, benign
-bio- (G) life biography, biology
-chrono- (G) time chronic, synchronize
-dict- (L) say dictate, diction
-duc- (L) lead, make deduce, produce
-gen- (L) give birth gene, generate
7. PREFIX
A letter or group of letters attached to
the beginning of a word that partly
indicates its meaning.
Common prefixes include anti-
(against), co- (with), mis- (wrong,
bad), and trans-(across).
8. TYPES OF
Derivational prefixes do not
normally alter the word class of
the base word; that is, a prefix is
added to a noun to form a new
noun with a different meaning.
10. PREFIX
During the 1980s, 'mini-' gave way to
'micro-,' which has yielded to 'nano-.'
In the new millennium, companies
such as Nanometrics, Nanogen and
NanoPierce Technologies have all
embraced the prefix, despite
complaints their products were hardly
nano-scale (a billionth of a meter or
smaller).
(Alex Boese, "Electrocybertronics," Smithsonian, March 2008)
11. COMMON PREFIXES
Prefix Meaning Example
a-, an- without amoral
ante- before antecedent
anti- against anticlimax
auto- self autopilot
circum- around circumvent
co- with copilot
com-, con- with
companion,
contact
12. COMMON PREFIXES
contra- against contradict
de- off, away from devalue
dis- not disappear
en- put into enclose
ex- out of, former
extract, ex-
president
extra- extracurricular
hetero-
homo-
beyond, more
than
different
same
heterosexual
homonym
13. COMMON PREFIXES
intra- between
macro- large
intravenous
macroeconom
ics
micro- small microscope
mono- one monocle
non- not, without nonentity
omni- all, every omniscient
post- after postmortem
pre-, pro-
before,
forward
precede,
project
14. COMMON PREFIXES
sub- under submarine
syn- same time synchronize
trans- across transmit
tri- three tricycle
un- not unfinished
uni- one unicorn
15. SUFFIX
"Gazebo: The name is an 18th-
century joke word combining
'gaze' with the Latin suffix 'ebo,'
meaning 'I shall.‘”
(Encyclopedia Britannica Online)
16. TYPES OF
Derivational suffixes, on the other
hand, usually change both the
meaning and the word class; that
is, a suffix is often added to a
verb or adjective to form a new
noun with a different meaning.
17. EXAMPLE:
adjective: dark / suffixed
noun: darkness
verb: agree / suffixed noun: agreement
noun: friend / suffixed noun: friendship
(Douglas Biber, Susan Conrad, and Geoffrey Leech, Longman Student Grammar
of Spoken English, Longman, 2002)
18. SUFFIX
● A letter or group of letters added to the end
a word or stem (i.e.,
● a base form), serving to form a new word or
functioning as
● an inflectional ending.
21. COMMON NOUN SUFFIXES
Suffix Meaning Example
-acy state or quality privacy
-al act or process of refusal
-ance, -ence
-dom
state or quality
of
place or state of
being
-er, -or one who
-ism doctrine, belief
maintenance,
eminence
freedom,
kingdom
trainer,
protector
communism
22. COMMON NOUN SUFFIXES
-ist one who chemist
-ity, -ty quality of veracity
-ment condition of argument
-ness state of being heaviness
-ship position held fellowship
-sion, -tion state of being
concession,
transition
23. COMMON VERB SUFFIXES
-ate become eradicate
-en become enlighten
-ify, -fy
make or
become
terrify
-ize, -ise become civilize
24. COMMON ADJECTIVE SUFFIXES
-able, -ible capable of being edible, presentable
-al pertaining to regional
-esque reminiscent of picturesque
-ful notable for fanciful
-ic, -ical pertaining to musical, mythic
-ious, -ous characterized by nutritious, portentous
-ish having the quality of fiendish
-ive having the nature of creative
-less without endless
-y characterized by sleazy