The root word is pleasant. Some prefixes you get from that is pleasure displeasure pleasing pleasant unpleasant Hope this way help to you all out there i worked me hardest :}
Joy from late Middle English: from Old French enjoier'give joy to' or enjoïr 'enjoy,' both based on Latin gaudere 'rejoice.'
The root word for "enjoyment" is "joy".
Unpleasur
Enjoy
Enjoy would be the root.
The word 'enjoyment' is a noun, an abstract noun.The noun 'enjoyment' is a word for a feeling of pleasure from experiencing something you like; a word for an emotion; a word for a thing.
Yes, the word 'enjoyment' is a noun; a word for a feeling of pleasure derived from something you like; a word for a thing.
You did not get much enjoyment out of that journey did you
Here are three sentences using the word 'enjoyment': "Lisa falling over was much to Laura's enjoyment." "I take great enjoyment in learning new French vocabulary." "Jude bought a kite for her daughter's enjoyment."
Joy
Enjoy would be the root.
The word 'enjoyment' is a noun, an abstract noun.The noun 'enjoyment' is a word for a feeling of pleasure from experiencing something you like; a word for an emotion; a word for a thing.
Yes, the word 'enjoyment' is a noun; a word for a feeling of pleasure derived from something you like; a word for a thing.
"Vergnügen", "Freude" and "Genuss" are the translations of "enjoyment".
You did not get much enjoyment out of that journey did you
Here are three sentences using the word 'enjoyment': "Lisa falling over was much to Laura's enjoyment." "I take great enjoyment in learning new French vocabulary." "Jude bought a kite for her daughter's enjoyment."
I had much enjoyment when I went on ( a name of a ride ).
The noun 'enjoyment' is an abstract noun, sometimes called an idea noun.The noun 'enjoyment' is a word for a feeling of pleasure from experiencing something you like; a word for an emotion.
The word is joyously
fun
The abstract noun forms of the verb 'to enjoy' are enjoyment, and the gerund, enjoying.