There is two of them. The answer is (re)appear and (dis)appear.
No, "appear" is not the root word for "appearance." The root word for "appearance" is "appear," but the addition of the suffix "-ance" changes the word's grammatical function from a verb to a noun. In linguistics, a root word is the basic form of a word before any affixes are added.
The noun form is knowledgeability. The root noun is knowledge.
The root word for beginning is begin.
provision or provider.
I think it does not have a prefix but a root word;if so the root word is ami and the suffix is able.
The noun form of "appear" is "appearance."
No, "appear" is not the root word for "appearance." The root word for "appearance" is "appear," but the addition of the suffix "-ance" changes the word's grammatical function from a verb to a noun. In linguistics, a root word is the basic form of a word before any affixes are added.
The noun form for the verb to appear is appearance.
The noun form is knowledgeability. The root noun is knowledge.
The word appear is a verb not a noun. The abstract noun form is appearance.
The verb form of judge means to give an opinion or conclusion. Never judge a book by its cover.
verse. It's like the root word.
Who comes up with these questions? Victory is a noun.
The root word for beginning is begin.
provision or provider.
I think it does not have a prefix but a root word;if so the root word is ami and the suffix is able.
Yes, the word 'radishes' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'radish'; a word for a type of root vegetable; a word for a thing.