There are words that begin with the letter a and end with ful. However, there are no words on the English language that begin with the letters al and end with ful.
"Ful" at the end of a word is a suffix that means "full of" or "characterized by." It is used to create adjectives that describe something as being abundant or ample in a certain quality or attribute.
Most of the time, no, because adjectives describe a noun and verbs usually end in the " -ing" suffix, while adjectives end in various ways, such as happy (Random letter), jumping (may not be correct because the word describes what the noun is doing), etc.
Yes, the suffix is 'ful'. EX:Grate'ful' Wonder'ful' It occurs in a majority of words.
The prefix "ful" means full of or characterized by. It is used to form adjectives that describe something as having a particular quality to the maximum degree.
No, "ful" is not a standalone word in English. It is often used as a suffix to form adjectives (e.g., "beautiful," "playful") or as a abbreviation for "thank you" in texts or slang language.
No. The word compel is a verb, and does not use the suffix -ful (makes adjectives from nouns). The adjectives related to the verb compel are the predicates: compelling and compelled.
The suffix of "meaningful" is "-ful", which is used to form adjectives indicating the presence of qualities or characteristics.
insightful
Fulfill. That's the only one I thought of.
fulfillment , fulgurous, fuliginous that is all i found!
the answer is successful ful at the end