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
The suffix is -tion. This suffix means the process 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
It is short for "filament". So it normally makes the full word refer to the basic pieces that make up whatever the prefix or base word is.