Quadri (Latin) and Tetra (Greek) are both prefixes used for the number 4
No, "multi," "mono," and "tri" are not number prefixes. "Multi-" means many or multiple, "mono-" means one, and "tri-" means three. The number prefixes in English include "uni-" (one), "bi-" (two), "quad-" (four), "pent-" (five), and so on.
Mono- means one, di- means two, and poly- means many or multiple. These prefixes are commonly used in chemistry to indicate the number of atoms of an element in a compound.
The prefix meaning one, or single, is uni, as in a unicycle, which has only one wheel. Bi means two, as in a bicycle, which has two wheels. Tri means three, as in a tricycle, which has three wheels. To take it one step further, quad means four, as in a quad cane, which is a walking cane with four legs.
it means you added two to two...and then u get four. its the magic of math.. addition....
Un- and re- are two prefixes for "do."
A two-by-four is a heavy piece of wood, so I presume that the expression means to hit them hard.
The prefixes 'il-', 'im-', 'in-' and 'ir-' mean within, into, in, not and on
cirro, alto, strato, nimbo
it means lollipop
What do not mean in a prefixes
"mono" means "one," and "poly" means "many."
Two prefixes that mean "cut" or "cut out" are "dis-" and "ab-".