The suffix here would be -ist, meaning "one who does (something)."
This suffix is in English -ous.
The suffix for etymology is "ology", which means the study of.
The suffix for alkyl groups is -yl.
There is no specific suffix. There are various units, though.
The prefix of the word "nature" is "na-" and the suffix is "-ture".
state of being
One suffix that can be added to the word "nature" is "-al" to form the word "natural."
No prefix for natural, but the suffix is -al, meaning 'relating to'.
There is no suffix in "technobabble." The word "babble" was modified by the prefix techno- meaning of a technical nature.
The suffix '-ine' means 'to have the nature of', and changes a noun to an adjective; asinine; to have the nature of an ass ursine; to have the nature of a bear vulpine; to have the nature of a vulture marine; to have the nature of the sea saline; to have the nature of salt
The suffix "-ous" changes a noun into an adjective, indicating that something has or is characterized by the quality or nature of the original noun.
Eous is not a prefix. The suffix -eous means resembling or of the nature of.
The word "nature" contains no suffix Suffixes which may be attached to the root word include: -al (natural) -alist (naturalist) -ize (naturalize)
A prefix for philosophy could be "meta-" meaning beyond or transcending, while a suffix could be "-ology" meaning the study of something. In combination, "metaphilosophy" could refer to the study of the nature and methods of philosophy itself.
It is etymologically rooted in "gene" and "ous." "Gene" refers to the most basic unit of life, and "ous" comes from the Greek, meaning abundant, or full of. "-geneous," then, means "full of life."
An adjective suffix signifying relating or belonging to, of the nature of, tending to; as affirmative, active, conclusive, corrective, diminutive.