The Complete Word is :
"et cetera" which is latin for "and other things"
or it can stand for Electroconvulsive therapy
complete and the prefix is in
That's it complete. Variations are incomplete, completed, completing, completable, completely,
There is no concrete form of the word 'complete'.The noun form of the verb to complete is completion, an abstract noun as a word for a concept.The noun form of the adjective complete is completeness, an abstract noun as a word for a quality.Note: Some dictionaries have the word 'completer' as a word for 'one who completes' or 'that which completes'. That would be a concrete noun as a word for a person or a thing. Other dictionaries use the word 'completer' as the comparative form of the adjective 'complete'.
Complete Subject: Twelve hours Complete Predicate: Passed without a word from any of the group
SELFISH
answer all the clues-using your word skills,those of friends,consulting a dictionary etc
What is another word for complete.
no it is not. i am comes from the verb 'to be' i am you are he/she/it is etc etc
Depending on the context of the sentence, it can be either a verb or an adjective. If you want it to be an adjective, you can say, for example, "I completed my essay last night." To use it as a verb, you can say something like, "The complete list of songs is on the band's website."
a word meaning complete and utter failure
Comparative: more complete Superlative: most complete
i will complete my work
I want the complete list of songs with the word "heart" in them.
complete and the prefix is in
That's it complete. Variations are incomplete, completed, completing, completable, completely,
There is no concrete form of the word 'complete'.The noun form of the verb to complete is completion, an abstract noun as a word for a concept.The noun form of the adjective complete is completeness, an abstract noun as a word for a quality.Note: Some dictionaries have the word 'completer' as a word for 'one who completes' or 'that which completes'. That would be a concrete noun as a word for a person or a thing. Other dictionaries use the word 'completer' as the comparative form of the adjective 'complete'.
No. "Ment" is a suffix, not a complete word.