There is two of them. The answer is (re)appear and (dis)appear.
Reappear
appear again
Dis appear
appear
dis and re
Disappear
Disappear
disappear
Reappear
Reappear
Dis
There is two of them. The answer is (re)appear and (dis)appear.
There is no such prefix. You appear to have a misunderstanding of what prefixes are. They are supplements to the beginning of existing words that modify their meaning. For example, formed and preformed
The root word of disapear is apear but i have a question for you! What is a word with a prefix TEN?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!
I believe you mean " contagious ". It would appear that " con " is a prefix and " ious " is a suffix. However, contagious is a complete root in itself, meaning spreadable.
The prefix for "pear" is "p".
app
There is no prefix for 22. 22 is "twenty-two". No prefixes like "deci" appear here.
Yes, "dis" is a prefix meaning "not" or "opposite of", and "ed" is a suffix indicating the past tense.
Yes, "disappear" is a compound word composed of the prefix "dis-" and the root word "appear."
Dis
A prefix is a part at the beginning of a word, like prefix the prefix is pre........ in untold its un. if you took the prefix out it would be told, if you didnt take it out it would untold meaning it wasnt told.
First things first, the word 'Appear' means to come into sight; become visible or noticeable, typically without visible agent or apparent cause. That's the definition you would find if you were to Google the word. Now, 'Reappear' means for the same thing to happen again, or again and again, that's what the origin of the prefix word "Re" means; and that is the prefix word to "Reappear". Hope this helps.
There is two of them. The answer is (re)appear and (dis)appear.
There is no such prefix. You appear to have a misunderstanding of what prefixes are. They are supplements to the beginning of existing words that modify their meaning. For example, formed and preformed
The equals sign. It must appear at the start of all formulas.
It means not. example: disappear, not appear