well the prefix and a suffix are very alike in a certain amount of waysilliterate= prefix is liter
illiterate= suffix is rate
hope it helped
Illiterate means unable to read and write.
Adult literacy programs try to help people who somehow made it through the educational system without learning these basics.
The word is also used to indicate a person is not well-versed in a particular subject. If someone is a Science Fiction illiterate, they don't know or appreciate the genre. If someone is technologically illiterate, they probably need help sending email or accessing voice mail.
It means that a person is not able to read and write.
Someone who is illiterate - is a person that cannot read, or understand the meanings of words. Often they cannot write legible sentences either.
Adjective: having little or no education; especially: unable to read or write.
showing or marked by a lack of acquaintance with the fundamentals of a particular field of knowledge.
Example: Some 770 million people over the age of 15 remain illiterate.
benighted, catachrestic, ignorant, inerudite, solecistic, uneducated, unenlightened, ungrammatical, uninstructed, unlearned, unlettered, unread, unschooled, untaught, untutored
Illiterate is an adjective.
´illiterate´ means ´unable to read or write´.
Illiterate.
Illiterate
The word literate does not contain a prefix. One could be added, such as ill- forming illiterate.
"People who are illiterate cannot completely fulfill their roles as citizens." "In some Third World countries, more than 90% of the population is illiterate." "A program was set up to help illiterate migrant workers learn how to read and write."
You can be either "computer literate", meaning you are knowledgeable about computers or you can be "computer illiterate", meaning you have no knowledge of computers.
Illiterate is an adjective meaning someone who lacks literacy, or skill in writing and speaking.
´illiterate´ means ´unable to read or write´.
As can see it, if you split in two words, MAHA means GREAT, and MOODA means "ILLITERATE", thereby meaning "GREAT ILLITERATE".
Indecisive, independent, irate, intellectual
The illiterate man struggled to read the instructions on the packaging.
illiterate in spanish is analfabeto
il-literate (illiterate)
Illiterate.
Illiterate
Illiterate is usually an adjective, and in this sense does not have a plural form. The noun for illiterate is illiteracy, for which the plural can be illiteracies, but it is awkward. Illiterate is sometimes used as a noun to describe an illiterate person, in which case the plural would be illiterates, e.g. as in the insult, "You are a bunch of illiterates!"
male are more illiterate. for sure ;)