The suffix used in biochemistry to form the names of sugars is '-ose'.
The suffix of "telephoto" is "-o," which is a common suffix in English denoting a noun.
the prefix is ex- and the suffix is -tion or -ation
The prefix of recreation is "re-", meaning "again" or "back." The suffix is "-ation," which is used to form nouns denoting an action or process.
The suffix for 'finance' could be 'ing' for the act of doing it, or it could be 'ier' denoting the person financing.
The root word for macroglossia is "gloss," meaning tongue. The prefix is "macro-," indicating large or excessive. The suffix is "-ia," which is a suffix denoting a condition or state.
-ship suffix forming nouns: 1) denoting a quality or condition : companionship |courtship | fellowship | friendship | partnership |sponsorship | worship. 2) denoting status, office, or honor : ambassadorship | citizenship | ownership | statesmanship. • denoting a tenure of office : chairmanship | chancellorship | professorship |stewardship. 3) denoting a skill in a certain capacity : apprenticeship |clerkship |craftsmanship | entrepreneurship | horsemanship |marksmanship | penmanship. 4) denoting the collective individuals of a group : kinship | membership | readership.
ty is a suffix it means "the state of" or "the quality of" or "result of" captivity (in the state of being captive) clarity (has the quality of being clear) subtlety, cruelty
The prefix for requisite is "re-," meaning "again" or "back." The suffix for requisite is "-ite," which is used to form adjectives denoting a particular quality or characteristic.
True. The suffix -ment is commonly added to verbs to form nouns denoting the result or action of the verb.
The suffix saccharide means sugar :)
answer What suffix is added to indicate sugar diabetes?
The suffix is -ty. "Animus" is the original Latin root, meaning "spirit" and the -ty is the suffix (which creates a noun denoting a condition) -- thus the new word, "animosity." It is similar to the words bellicosity (from "bellus") and verbosity (from "verbum").