It means capable of doing something
Ir- is the most common prefix that is added on reversible. This makes the word irreversible.
the suffix is ible.
If something is inflexible, then it is not flexible.
No. The word "bible" is from the Latin biblia (Greek biblion) meaning book, or writing.An adjective form of bible is biblical.
There is no hard-and-fast rule. Words with -ible are of Latin origin, so the suffix is no longer being used to create new words; all new coinages use -able (for example, if you're looking to spell the word that means "suitable for being blogged", it would be "bloggable"). However, there are also words of Latin origin that use -able.One guideline that follows from this is that, if you remove the suffix and are left with a complete word, this generally means that the suffix was spelled -able and not -ible. This doesn't work for all words, though: accessible, contemptible, and flexible are a few of the exceptions.For more detail see the related link below.
Ir- is the most common prefix that is added on reversible. This makes the word irreversible.
the suffix is ible.
The suffix -able or -ible means the ability to. One common word with this is flexible.
ible is not a prefix, its a suffix (used at the end of a word/term) Words misspelled with -able Reproducible Words misspelled with -ible Indispensable
Yes, word ending in the suffix -ible (capable of being) are typically adjectives.Examples:edibleinvisiblelegibleplausible
-ible
The correct suffix for exhaust is -ible. In other words, it is exhaustible.
The suffix in incredible is -ible. It means the ability to.
The suffix -worthy means suitable for or suited to.
edible
If something is inflexible, then it is not flexible.
There is no such English word as "ible".