Pre
It's a prefix. Pre- means before. It goes before the main part of the word. Example: Exodus
No. A prefix is a series of letters that goes before a word. Ex: DISlike UNimportant UNusual
A prefix goes in front of a word while a suffix goes at the end of a word.
A word part is basically a couple of simple letters such as in, un, de. The simple use of putting the word part "un" in front of words completely changes the meaning to the opposite. ie. Something necessary becomes unnecessary, usual to unusual. Thereby simply adding a wordpart can completely change the meaning of a word.
8-letter wordsentrance, outrance10-letter wordsmonstrance, penetrance, reentrance12-letter wordsremonstrance13-letter wordsrecalcitrance
The prefix "mis-" can be added before lead to form "mislead."
A prefix goes before the word and can change the meaning, or the way that the word is used. For example, the prefix un- can be added to the word to give it opposite meaning.
Semi
It's a prefix. Pre- means before. It goes before the main part of the word. Example: Exodus
No. A prefix is a series of letters that goes before a word. Ex: DISlike UNimportant UNusual
Usually a Prefix is an add on that goes before a word. E.g. Dehydrated. De- is the prefix and hydrated is the word that de- was added on to.
The prefix that goes on "reverent" is "ir-".
The prefix that goes with "humane" is "in-" as in "inhumane."
The prefix that goes with discipline is "self-".
Indefinite
UNPREPARE
The prefix that goes in front of chip is micro-.