-ology is a suffix, not a part of speech. A suffix ends a word to give more details/specifics to the root. It can also cause the root to mean something different than it originally meant.
"-ology" means "the study of."
The suffix ology means 'the study of'.
part of speech
Adjective
What part of speech is thaw
The part of speech for oscillate is verb.
An adjective is a part of speech.
It's a noun. I think most words that end -ology are nouns - biology geology microbiology etc
-Ology is a suffix. -Ology often means the study of.
The suffix -ology means the study of
ology means "the study of"
The suffix -ology means the study of
No, "olgy" is not a standard suffix in English. It does not have a specific meaning or grammatical role in forming words like other suffixes such as "-ly" or "-tion."
-ology means the study of
-ology means the study of in Greek.
zoology, pronounced "zoo-ology"
Could you please elaborate on what type of ology it is? (E.g. etymology)
"Psych" refers to the mind or soul, while "ology" means the study of. Therefore, psychology is the scientific study of the mind and behavior.
Correct, the suffix -ology means the study of a particular subject or field. For example, biology is the study of living organisms, and geology is the study of the Earth's structure and composition.