Affixes and roots
Adding affixes
to existing words (the base or root) to form new words is common in academic
English. Prefixes are added to the front of the base (like
dislike),
whereas suffixes are added to the end of the base (active
activate).
Prefixes usually do not change the class of the base word, but suffixes usually
do change the class of the word.
The most common
prefixes used to form new verbs in academic English are: re-,
dis-, over-, un-, mis-, out-. The most common suffixes are: -ise, -en, -ate, -(i)fy. By far the most common
affix in academic English is -ise.
Verbs
e.g. prefix + verb verb
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Examples
|
re-
|
again or back
|
restructure,
revisit, reappear, rebuild, refinance
|
dis-
|
reverses the meaning
of the verb
|
disappear,
disallow, disarm, disconnect, discontinue
|
over-
|
too much
|
overbook,
oversleep, overwork
|
un-
|
reverses the meaning
of the verb
|
unbend,
uncouple, unfasten
|
mis-
|
badly or wrongly
|
mislead,
misinform, misidentify
|
out-
|
more or better than
others
|
outperform,
outbid
|
be-
|
make or cause
|
befriend,
belittle
|
co-
|
together
|
co-exist,
co-operate, co-own
|
de-
|
do the opposite of
|
devalue,
deselect
|
fore-
|
earlier, before
|
foreclose,
foresee
|
inter-
|
between
|
interact,
intermix, interface
|
pre-
|
before
|
pre-expose,
prejudge, pretest
|
sub-
|
under/below
|
subcontract,
subdivide
|
trans-
|
across, over
|
transform,
transcribe, transplant
|
under-
|
not enough
|
underfund,
undersell, undervalue, underdevelop
|
e.g. Suffix used to form verbs
with the meaning "cause to be".
Suffix
|
Example
|
-ise
|
stabilise,
characterise, symbolise, visualise, specialise
|
-ate
|
differentiate,
liquidate, pollinate, duplicate, fabricate
|
-fy
|
classify,
exemplify, simplify, justify
|
-en
|
awaken,
fasten, shorten, moisten
|
Nouns
The most common prefixes used to
form new nouns in academic English are: co- and
sub-. The most common suffixes are: -tion, -ity, -er, -ness, -ism, -ment, -ant, -ship,
-age, -ery. By far the most common noun affix in academic English is
-tion.
e.g. prefix + noun noun
Prefix
|
Meaning
|
Examples
|
anti-
|
against
|
anticlimax,
antidote, antithesis
|
auto-
|
self
|
autobiography,
automobile
|
bi-
|
two
|
bilingualism,
biculturalism, bi-metalism
|
co-
|
joint
|
co-founder,
co-owner, co-descendant
|
counter-
|
against
|
counter-argument,
counter-example, counter-proposal
|
dis-
|
the converse of
|
discomfort,
dislike
|
ex-
|
former
|
ex-chairman,
ex-hunter
|
hyper-
|
extreme
|
hyperinflation,
hypersurface
|
in-
|
the converse of
|
inattention,
incoherence, incompatibility
|
in-
|
inside
|
inpatient,
|
inter-
|
between
|
interaction,
inter-change, interference
|
kilo-
|
thousand
|
kilobyte
|
mal-
|
bad
|
malfunction,
maltreatment, malnutrition
|
mega-
|
million
|
megabyte
|
mis-
|
wrong
|
misconduct,
misdeed, mismanagement
|
mini-
|
small
|
mini-publication,
mini-theory
|
mono-
|
one
|
monosyllable,
monograph, monogamy
|
neo-
|
new
|
neo-colonialism,
neo-impressionism
|
out-
|
separate
|
outbuilding,
|
poly-
|
many
|
polysyllable
|
pseudo-
|
false
|
pseudo-expert
|
re-
|
again
|
re-organisation,
re-assessment, re-examination
|
semi-
|
half
|
semicircle,
semi-darkness
|
sub-
|
below
|
subset,
subdivision
|
super-
|
more than, above
|
superset,
superimposition, superpowers
|
sur-
|
over and above
|
surtax
|
tele-
|
distant
|
telecommunications,
|
tri-
|
three
|
tripartism
|
ultra-
|
beyond
|
ultrasound
|
under-
|
below, too little
|
underpayment,
under-development, undergraduate
|
vice-
|
deputy
|
vice-president
|
Exercise
e.g. Suffix added to a verb (V),
noun (N) or adjective (A) noun
Suffix
|
Meaning
|
Examples
|
-tion
-sion |
action/instance of
V-ing
|
alteration,
demonstration
expansion, inclusion, admission |
-er
|
person who V-s
something used for V-ing |
advertiser,
driver
computer, silencer |
-ment
|
action/instance of
V-ing
|
development,
punishment, unemployment
|
-ant
-ent |
person who V-s
|
assistant,
consultant
student |
-age
|
action/result of V
|
breakage,
wastage, package
|
-al
|
action/result of V
|
denial,
proposal, refusal, dismissal
|
-ence
-ance |
action/result of V
|
preference,
dependence, interference
attendance, acceptance, endurance |
-ery/-ry
|
action/instance of
V-ing
place of V-ing |
bribery,
robbery, misery
refinery, bakery |
Suffix
|
Meaning
|
Examples
|
-er
|
person concerned with
N
|
astronomer,
geographer
|
-ism
|
doctrine of N
|
Marxism,
Maoism, Thatcherism
|
-ship
|
state of being N
|
friendship,
citizenship, leadership
|
-age
|
collection of N
|
baggage,
plumage
|
Suffix
|
Meaning
|
Examples
|
-ity
|
state or quality of
being A
|
ability,
similarity, responsibility, curiosity
|
-ness
|
state or quality of
being A
|
darkness,
preparedness, consciousness
|
-cy
|
state or quality of
being A
|
urgency,
efficiency, frequency
|
Exercise
Adjectives
Many adjectives are formed from
a base of a different class with a suffix (e.g. -less,
-ous). Adjectives can also be formed from other adjectives,
especially by the negative prefixes (un-, in- and non-).
The most common suffixes are -al, -ent, -ive, -ous, -ful, -less.
e.g. Suffix added to verbs or
nouns adjective
Suffix
|
Example
|
-al
|
central,
political, national, optional, professional
|
-ent
|
different,
dependent, excellent
|
-ive
|
attractive,
effective, imaginative, repetitive
|
-ous
|
continuous,
dangerous, famous
|
-ful
|
beautiful,
peaceful, careful
|
-less
|
endless,
homeless, careless, thoughtless
|
-able
|
drinkable,
countable, avoidable,
|
Exercise
e.g. negative + adjective adjective
Prefix
|
Examples
|
un-
|
unfortunate,
uncomfortable, unjust
|
im-/in-/ir-/il-
|
immature,
impatient, improbable, inconvenient, irreplaceable, illegal
|
non-
|
non-fiction,
non-political, non-neutral
|
dis-
|
disloyal,
dissimilar, dishonest
|
Exercise
Mixed
e.g. base with both prefix and
suffix
Adjectives:
uncomfortable, unavoidable, unimaginative, inactive, semi-circular
Nouns:
disappointment, misinformation, reformulation
Word formation
Formal written English uses
nouns more than verbs. For example, judgement rather
than judge, development
rather than develop, admiration
rather than admire.
There appeared to be
evidence of differential treatment of children.
This is reflected in
our admiration for people who have made something of their lives,
sometimes against great odds, and in our somewhat disappointed judgment of
those who merely drift through life.
All airfields in the
country would be nationalised, and the government would continue with the development
of new aircraft as recommended by the Brabazon Committee.
Associated with nominalisation
is the occurrence of prepositional phrases, introduced by of:
judgment of
those
treatment of
children
development of
new aircraft
-tion is the most common suffix used in this way. For example: alteration, resignation.
However others are: -ity ability, similarity, complexity; -ness
blindness, darkness, preparedness; -ment development, encouragement; -ship
friendship; -age mileage; -ery robbery, bribery; -al
arrival; -ance assistance, resemblance.
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