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Yes. Nearly anything that ends with the suffix "-ly" is an adjective.
The adjective form is the word "national".
The adjective form of the word 'fallacy' is fallacious.
Words that end in the suffix -arium are nouns. Some examples include: aquarium, herbarium, planetarium, oceanarium, and lunarium.noun
-ish or -less
The suffix -ed can be added to the word "need" to form the past tense "needed."
Yes, "dangerous" is a word with a suffix. The suffix is "-ous," which is added to the root word "danger" to form the adjective "dangerous."
No, "trivial" is not a suffix. It is an adjective meaning something unimportant or insignificant. A suffix is a morpheme added at the end of a word to form a derivative.
The -ful part of the word tasteful is a suffix. Suffixes are affixes added to the end of a word to create a new word or modify the meaning. In this case, -ful is added to the root word taste to form the adjective tasteful.
-ist.
A suffix that cannot be added to a word to make it an adjective is "-able" because it only turns nouns into adjectives, not verbs or other adjectives.
The suffix that can be added to the word distinct is -ion, to form the word distinction.
The suffix "-ing" can be added to "shape" to form the word "shaping."
A suffix is a word part added to the end of a base word to create a new word or alter the meaning of the original word. In "oral," the suffix "-al" changes the word from a noun to an adjective indicating that something is related to the mouth or spoken language.
The suffix added to the word "conquer" to turn it into an adjective is "-able", making it "conquerable".
The word foolish has a suffix. The suffix is - ish. The word foolish does not have a prefix.
The suffix of the word "diabetes" is "-es" which indicates a plural form or a possessive form when added to a word.