The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
The suffix "er" in "happier" changes the meaning from simply being happy to comparing the degree of happiness between two things or individuals. It denotes a comparative form of the adjective "happy," indicating that one thing or person has a higher level of happiness than another.
Use -er endings for verbs that indicate the actor performing the action (e.g., driver, teacher), -or endings for nouns indicating the doer of an action or the person in a position (e.g., director, professor), and -ar endings for verbs in the infinitive form in Spanish.
French -er verbs are regular verbs that end in -er. The endings for regular -er verbs in French are -e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent. These endings are used to conjugate the verb for different subjects such as je, tu, il/elle/on, nous, vous, ils/elles.
You're probably referring to the forms of an adjectivethat ends with 'y'. The comparative form drops the 'y' and adds 'ier', the superlative form drops the 'y' and adds 'iest'. Some examples are:happy, happier, happiestfunny, funnier, funniestchewy, chewier, chewiestsilly, sillier, silliestwary, warier, wariestphony, phonier, phoniest
No, the "-er" in "container" is not a suffix. It is part of the base word and does not change the word's meaning or function. A suffix is a word part added to the end of a base word to form a new word or modify its meaning.
The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
The word happier has "er" added and increases the term happy to a greater happiness i.e. happy and then happier
More than someone else-being used in comparison
The suffix "er" in "happier" changes the meaning from simply being happy to comparing the degree of happiness between two things or individuals. It denotes a comparative form of the adjective "happy," indicating that one thing or person has a higher level of happiness than another.
It just e before c except rafter t
Common word endings include: Plural: -s or -es Tense endings that change the tense of a verb: -ed, -en, -ing And then there are common suffixes added to change the meaning or part of speech of a word: -er, -est, -tion, -ly That's just a few examples
Common word endings include: Plural: -s or -es Tense endings that change the tense of a verb: -ed, -en, -ing And then there are common suffixes added to change the meaning or part of speech of a word: -er, -est, -tion, -ly That's just a few examples
Common word endings include: Plural: -s or -es Tense endings that change the tense of a verb: -ed, -en, -ing And then there are common suffixes added to change the meaning or part of speech of a word: -er, -est, -tion, -ly That's just a few examples
Usually -er.
helper
Happier
It's one of the French endings to some words. The endings change when the word is a masculine or feminine. The er, re and ir verbs are very confusing