No, "Smith" is not a suffix part of my legal name.
This would be the Sr. Jr. or III after your name. Most students do not have this on their name and would leave it blank.
The suffix is -os.
No, it's merely a part of his name.
"Junior" is typically reserved for informal use as a suffix following a person's name, such as "John Smith Jr." It is not punctuated separately unless it is part of a sentence.
Jr. is not a suffix, it is an abbreviation for Junior, a part of a person's name (such as Martin Luther King, Jr.). As part of a name, Jr. or Junior is a proper noun and always capitalized. The possessive form can be written as Jr.'s or Junior's. Example: Martin Luther King Jr.'s speeches have become part of American history.
It's called the suffix, and is more a title than a part of a name.
A suffix is a part of a larger word; for example, in the word helpless, "less" is a suffix. Jr. is just part of the name, not a suffix, since it is not attached to any other word. However, names can have prefixes or suffixes. For example, John McCain, the "Mc" is a prefix, attached to the word. In Icelandic, you can have names such as "Siggurdsdottir" in which "dottir" is a suffix (meaning, the daughter of).
there is no suffix in extraordinary....
"Mitt" is not a prefix or suffix. It is a standalone word referring to a type of glove that covers the hand and part of the arm.
No; it is not a suffix due to it being part of the word. "TION" is a suffix, since it changes the word and not always having to be part of the word.
The domain name is the part of the URL of a site that includes the site's name (example: answers) and the suffix indicating what kind of organization it is (.com for commercial). Another example is: name (wikipedia) and suffix (.org for nonprofit organization.)
The suffix "-ide" is used in the part of the name that represents the anion in a binary ionic compound. For example, chloride, oxide, and sulfide are examples of anions that form binary ionic compounds.