You can use "im" as a prefix to indicate negation or lack of something, such as in words like "impossible" or "imperfect." It alters the meaning of the base word that follows it.
The prefix im- has the same meaning in the word "improper." Both "impolite" and "improper" use the prefix im- to indicate negation or a lack of propriety or politeness.
The prefix for immigrant is "im-".
pro
The prefix word of "possible" is "im-".
im is a prefix for moral
For negation, I would use im-
"Im" is a common prefix in itself, you don't add a prefix to a prefix.
"not."
It has a prefix, the prefix is im. The root word is possible........now I have a question for you, does impossibly have a prefix. I think so but I'm not so sure.
pro
Yes, im is the prefix in the word imperative. The prefix im can mean not, into, on, near, or towards.
The prefix of impolite is "im" meaning "not".
The word IMPOLITE has a prefix, because of im-.
Some prefixes that start with "im-" include "impossible," "imperfect," and "immature." These prefixes typically indicate negation or reversal of the word following them.
The prefix -im. For impossibility.
im is a prefix for moral
"Possibility" doesn't have a prefix. You could add the prefix im- to it to make the word impossibility.