ANSWER
Cuckold
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Words that end and/or with suffix old:
acold. ahold. anticold. behold. bifold. billfold. blindfold. bold. centerfold. chokehold. cold. copyhold. cuckold. eightfold. enfold. fanfold. fingerhold. fivefold. fold. foothold. foretold. fourfold. freehold. gatefold. gold. handhold. hold. household. hundredfold. infold. interfold. kobold. leasehold. mangold. manifold. manyfold. marigold. millionfold. mold. multifold. nailfold. ninefold. onefold. outscold. outsold. outtold. overbold. overcold. overhold. oversold. overwithhold. pinfold. premold. presold. refold. remold. resold. retold. roothold. scaffold. scold. sevenfold. severalfold. sheepfold. sixfold. snowmold. sold. stokehold. stranglehold. stronghold. subthreshold. tenfold. thousandfold. threefold. threshold. throttlehold. toehold. told. trifold. twofold. ultracold. undersold. unfold. unmold. unsold. untold. upfold. uphold. withhold. wold.
'-old' is not an English language suffix.But -oid is an English language suffix, and means 'resembling', such as rhomboid, which means resembling a rhombus.
Because they're are different words all together.Answer:The difference between the suffix -ist and the suffix -er is based on the origin of the word (where it came from). If the word origin is from Greek or Latin the suffix -ist would be used. If the origin of the word is from Old English or Germanic then the suffix -er was used.
Indicating state or condition fellowship.
The suffix -mas evolves from the Old English word maesse meaning festival, feast day or mass.
In place names it is believed to be from the Old English for homestead or farm. Possibly derived from the German 'heim' meaning home. Therefore indicating an Anglo-Saxon settlement.
'-old' is not an English language suffix.But -oid is an English language suffix, and means 'resembling', such as rhomboid, which means resembling a rhombus.
Because they're are different words all together.Answer:The difference between the suffix -ist and the suffix -er is based on the origin of the word (where it came from). If the word origin is from Greek or Latin the suffix -ist would be used. If the origin of the word is from Old English or Germanic then the suffix -er was used.
Indicating state or condition fellowship.
words ending in -ath: * bath * math * path * wrath * hath (not commonly used, an old word)
W at the start of the plate (prefix): Feb to Sept 2000. W at the end (suffix): 1980
* Christmas * Candlemas * Michaelmas * Georgemas * Martinmas The suffix mas originally came from the Old English word maesse (sometimes written as masse or messe)meaning festival, feast day or mass. Thus, it can be seen that many saints had festivals named after them, using their name, e.g. "Michaelmas" was the festival of St Michael.
No, "ling" is not a Greek suffix. It is an Old English suffix used to form nouns indicating a type of plant or fish, such as "sapling" or "codling."
There are many words. Some are slow, elderly, cranky, old, and grey
The suffix "-ard" is used to form nouns denoting a person characterized by a specific quality or trait, often carrying a negative connotation. Examples include "drunkard" and "coward," indicating someone who is frequently drunk or lacks courage, respectively.
There are no English words currently in use that end with the letters -wh.However, the word slowh (meaning 'slay') was used by Chaucer (1343-1400), but this word is now obsolete.(See Related links below)
because ium is a scientific word for elementIt is a Latin word suffix for nouns identifying their syntactic place in a sentence. Another Latin word suffix is us. One means subject and the other means object of sentence, but I can't remember which is which right now.
mold