a suffex is a ending to a base word.....
No, "acquire" does not have a suffix. It is a standalone word.
The suffix word of "exclusive" is "exclusivity."
The word "unread" fits this description, as "un-" is a prefix that means 'opposite' and "-read" is a suffix indicating that the action has already happened.
if you refer to the prefix A as in A123ABC then it is 1984-1985. The suffex A as in ABC123A would be from mid sixties.
It doesn't mean anything. I can't even guess what alternate spellings might make those Latin words. Sorry. :(
When a suffix is added to a word root, it forms a new word known as a derivative or inflected form. The suffix changes the original word's meaning or function, such as indicating tense, number, or gender.
A suffix is a letter or group of letters added to the end of a word to change its meaning or create a new word. It is typically added after the root or base word.
CAN=Controller Area Network. The CAN suffex is a set of extended protocols. Simply put the OBDIICAN is more advanced then the standard OBDII reader.
Enzymes are proteins that catalyze or increase the rates of chemical reactions and ends with -ase. ase.. is the suffex for the name of Enzymes as.... Diastase , Zymase , oxidase, reductase etc.........
* end * eat * elk * ebb * elf * egg * eek * eel * elm * ear * err * eve * ewe * ego * emu
You could say 'oni no ookami,' written: 鬼の狼
It is not a suffix in the Loch Ness Monster, that is the name of the monster that lives in Loch Ness If you are just using -ness as a suffix, here's what it is: a native English suffix attached to adjectives and participles, forming abstract nouns denoting quality and state (and often, by extension, something exemplifying a quality or state): darkness; goodness; kindness; obligingness; preparedness