almanac. ammoniac. amnesiac. anaphrodisiac. aphrodisiac. armagnac. bivouac. brainiac. calpac. cardiac. celeriac. coeliac. cognac. demoniac. dipsomaniac. egomaniac. elegiac. guaiac. haemophiliac. heliac. hypochondriac. iliac. insomniac. ipecac. kalpac. kleptomaniac. lac. lilac. linac. mac. maniac. medivac. megalomaniac. melancholic. monomaniac. muntjac. nymphomaniac. paradisiac. paranoiac. pericardiac. pyromaniac. ricrac. tacamahac. tambac. tarmac.tendrac. tictac. tombac. yashmac.
If the 'ac' ends the word, then it is a suffix, not a prefix. Prefixes by definition are added to the beginning of a root word.But as a suffix, '-ac' is the adjectival ending derived from the Greek, and therefore means "of, related, or pertaining to [the root]." Thus 'amnesia' becomes the adjective 'amnesiac', and the noun 'mania' becomes the adjective 'maniac'.
There is no suffix for accept. Ac- is the prefix. Cept is the root word.
Yes. in- is a prefix. ac- is a prefix. -ate is a suffix.
The prefix of "acquainted" is "ac-" and the suffix is "-ed".
re claim dis claim ac claim also quitclaim, exclaim, declaim
-ac-ic
The medical term containing the suffix -ac is "cardiac," which refers to anything related to the heart.
Cardio means heart. Ologist means a scientist of or pratitioner of.
The prefix or suffix "ac" generally indicates something related to sharpness or keenness, as in "acute" meaning sharp or severe.
accent from ac- to or towards + -cent-, to sing from L. cantus, to sing. Related to chant
The prefix for "accompany" is "ac-" and there is no specific suffix for this word.
The suffix that means "pertaining to" is "-ial", such as in the word "special".