Suffixes come at the end of words, after a root word. For example, the word manageable. 'Manage' being the root word and 'able' being the suffix meaning capable of; therefore, manageable means capable of managing.
A suffix is found at the end of a word. In the English language, there are many suffices. e.g. Car / Cars the s on cars shows that this word is a plural. Other examples of suffices are -ed,
-es, -ing, -est. There are many other suffices that perform many actions on/with/for a word.
The antonym of a suffix is a prefix. This is found at the start of a word. e.g. anti-, in-, pre-, ex-.
At the end of the word.
At the end of the word
a root word
The suffix is -less, and the word is careless.
No. A suffix is a two or three letters added to a word such as un- added to comfortable makes the word uncomfortable. If you add almost to without you have almostwithout which is not a word you will find in a dictionary
One example of a suffix is agoraphobia. Agora being the stem or prefix, while phobia is the suffix.
the root word would be strut.
a
The root word of "maiden" is "maid," which refers to a young unmarried woman.
Neither, a prefix comes at the beginning of a word and the suffix at the end; therefore a word could not be either but parts of it could in this word tion is a suffix and the base word would be resolute. Hope this helps:)
Not really. Tiny is a word, usually used as an adjective. A suffix would be a syllable added to a word, such as; ette or let.
in, insufficient
-ize
The suffix you could add to the root word "truth" to create a word that means characterized by honesty is "-ful", resulting in the word "truthful".