prefix
con pro via
The word "con" can stand for many things. One of the most common is as the antonym for "pro", as in pros and cons. In this case, con means the negatives of the situation.
pro, con
it is a debate An occasion for pro and con is: debate
the difference between a pro and a con is that a pro is the good thing and a con is the bad thing about htte problem.
Straight Latin; pro; for, in agreement. Con; against, disagreement.
pro means the positives of a issue con means the negatives of a issue
pro
Pro: you could be like sponge bob and twist all which ways Con: Your probably not a human:(
Power Pro and Con - 1918 was released on: USA: February 1918
problem
Con- Against (This is incorrect... Contra- means against) Con- With or Together (from Latin) The common misconception is that Con (like in Pro or Con) is the same as the word prefix con-. A Con is a negative side to a point, or argument, and a Pro is an affirming side to the same point, or argument. These are two totally different uses of the three letters "con" with totally opposite meanings. The prefix means "With" and the stand-alone word means "Against." Be careful. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is the only way I knew how to comment... Sorry... Anyways, This is the only place that doesn't say it means against, but from Latin, clud, or clus, the root word, means to shut out. This wouldn't make sense with the word conclude, which, by this definition, means: to shut out together. Please help?