i beleive it is phile
A bibliophile.
A person who reads a lot of books is typically referred to as a bibliophile or a bookworm. Bibliophile is derived from the Greek words "biblion" (book) and "philos" (loving), indicating a deep love for books. Bookworm, on the other hand, refers to someone who spends a lot of time reading or studying, often to the exclusion of other activities. Both terms convey a strong interest and passion for reading.
There is no suffix in misjudge.
Yes, the suffix is tion
-ic is the suffix. This suffix means in relation of.
Lover of: -phile Example: Bibliophile (lover of books)
Bibliophile, franklophile, anglophile, ect. "Franklophile" ? "ect" ? Glory be! Francophile etc xenophile/oenophile/bibliophile/Anglophile/audiophile spelling-things-properly-phile
A bibliophile is someone who loves books. I am a bibliophile. We have a bibliophile club at school.
A person that loves books is called a bibliophile.
My sister is a bibliophile.
A bibliophile.
A bibliophile is a person who loves or collects books.
I am a bibliophile. My family and I all share a great love for books so in technical terms we are bibliophile
book collector Bibliophile: A lover or collector of books
A bibliophile is a person who loves books, or a person who collects books, not necessarily for the purpose of reading them.
Bibliophile is not from a Latin root: it is based on two Greek words biblios and phileinwhich literally means love books
Bibliophile might be the word you're looking for. A bibliophile is one who loves books.