Exciteing
The teacher tried to excite students about history.I wanted to excite my child to use her imagination.
The word 'excited' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to excite.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The noun forms of the verb to excite are excitement and the gerund, exciting.
In some languages, yes. But not in English. All English grammatical inflections (not that there are very many of them and most of them are -s) are suffixes. Prefixes are used to change the meaning of the word not as grammatical indicators. In Swahili, on the other hand, all grammatical inflections are prefixes. Swahili does not use suffixes.
regretable
no not necessarily all the time in effect :) good luck with the other questions :)
The base of a word, also known as the root, is the main part of the word that carries its core meaning and is left after all prefixes and suffixes are removed. It is the foundation upon which prefixes and suffixes are added to create new words or modify the meaning of the base word.
Some suffixes for the word "select" include -ion (selection), -ive (selective), and -ed (selected).
Every Suffixes words must give a different meaning because that's why we all call it SUFFIXES!
The word excite is a verb, and has no plural. When used in the present tense, the form used with the third-person singular is excites, while the form for all other person is excite.
The teacher tried to excite students about history.I wanted to excite my child to use her imagination.
In the OED, after all the suffixes and abbreviations, the first real word is saag = spinach in Hindi.
In the OED, after all the suffixes and abbreviations, the first real word is saag = spinach in Hindi.
The word 'excited' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to excite.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The noun forms of the verb to excite are excitement and the gerund, exciting.
There isn't any because the word gnat (you spelled it wrong) does not have a prefix or sufix. Not all words have prefixes or sufixes.
When suffixes are added to words, it can change the meaning, part of speech, or tense of the original word. For example, adding "-ed" to "cook" changes it from a verb to a past tense verb ("cooked"). Suffixes can also create new words or modify the original word's grammatical function.
The root or base word of a word is the simple word before suffixes or prefixes are added. For example: Life is the root word of 'lifelessness'. If you remove the prefixes '-less' and '-ness', the end result will be the word 'life'. In this case, all you have to do is dissect the word. Piteousness. Piteousness = pity + less + ness If you take out the suffixes ('-less' and '-ness'), you get the word 'pity'. So the root word of piteousness is pity.
A base word is a word by itself, and you can add prefixes and suffixes to change the tense. ("Sing is a word by itself, but I can change it to "singing" or "singer.") A root word has no meaning on its own; you have to add suffixes and prefixes for it to mean anything at all. ("Rupt" is not a word, but I can make it "disrupt" or "erupt" or "rupture.")