-ist (not -list) means "one who" so bio- (life) + -log(y) (in this case "science study" + -ist, one who literally means "one who studies life science".
"Vore" is certainly the suffix.
This suffix is in English -ous.
There is no specific suffix. There are various units, though.
The suffix here would be -ist, meaning "one who does (something)."
-ic is the suffix of metamorphic. This suffix means related to art or science.
It is not a science, it is a form of mathematics. The suffix "-metry" often refers to mathematics, "-ology" refers for a type of science.
The suffix for the word "ology" is -ology. It is commonly used to indicate a branch of study or science.
The "ology" suffix more or less defines it as a science - the formal study of crime and its detection.
In science, it relates to a type of sugar. In language, it is the same suffix relation as ous, eous, and ious, meaning: Full of.
The study of something. Biology= Bio (life) + ology (study of).
The suffix "-ology" originates from the Greek language. It derives from the Greek word "logia," which means "the study of" or "the science of." This suffix is commonly used to form words related to various fields of study or expertise.
Depends on what your masters is: Master of arts (MA) or masters of science (MSc)
Example: John Smith M.S.
A common suffix for dentist is "-ry," as in dentistry.
there are millions, some are: ribose, deoxyribose, fructose, and galactose. most sugars have the "-ose" suffix.
The only one i can think of is... Hypothesis: what means a guess or estimate (usually used in science.)