No; it's a noun ending.
acoording to what i have learned in school, it means speak as in, DICtionary, it means a book that tells us words, how to say them, their parts of speech,ect.
The suffix "-US" comes from Latin, and denotes masculine gender, nominative case, and singular number. That is, it takes a part of a word and converts it into a masculine singular noun. For example, in the word "BONUS", "BON-" means "good", so "BONUS" is a good thing. Another example is "LOCUS". The root "LOC-" means "place", as in "location" or "allocate". So "LOCUS" literally means "The place".The suffix "-US" is different from the suffix "-OUS", which actually takes a word and converts it into an adjective, such as "JOY" to "JOYOUS".Some words, like "Hummus", are not counterexamples because "hummus" is not the fusion of "HUMM-" and "-US". "Humm" has no meaning on its own.Try again. -us is not an English ending. It is Latin, and it is found on masculine, feminine and neuter nouns (e.g. carrus, manus and genus, respectively). Generally it indicates the nominative, but in some 3rd declension nouns like senatus -us, it is also the genitive, and of course neuter nominatives and accusatives are always the same.If you meant -ous, then the second paragraph above is correct.
Yes, Australians typically spell "personalization" as "personalisation," using the British English spelling with the '-ise' suffix instead of the American English '-ize' suffix.
Is the word you're taking the prefix and suffix away from "indispensable"? If so, then the word minus the prefix and suffix would be "dispense", which means to give away/get rid of. If something or someone is "indispensable" on the other hand, then you can't do without them because they are important.
The suffix that means "study of" is -logy. Therefore, combining it with the combining form gastro would give us gastrology, which refers to the study of the stomach.
Axillary means pertaining to the armpit. Axilla is commonly used to mean armpit in the US, but in UK another name for the armpit is the oxter.axilla = armpits
Us- in medical terminology is the masculine latin noun and is also a singular suffix for many words. It can be changed to -i to make a plural form of many words. For example: bronchus can be changed to bronchi.
The suffix "-us" in the word "hydrocephalus" indicates that it is a noun form derived from the adjective "hydrocephalic." It is commonly used in medical terminology to denote a condition or disease related to fluid accumulation in the brain.
acoording to what i have learned in school, it means speak as in, DICtionary, it means a book that tells us words, how to say them, their parts of speech,ect.
There is no suffix in Deum Deus. If you mean the ending of Deus, then the complete "suffix" (rather ending) is -us, not -s. And the -us indicates the word is a nominative. The nominative in Latin grammar is the subject of the sentence.Here is Deus completely declined in the singular:Nominative: DeusGenitive: DeiDative: DeoAccusative: DeumAblative: Deo
The main difference between the internet domain suffix TW and the domain suffix US is geographical location. TW is the domain suffix used for websites in Taiwan, and the US domain suffix is used for websites in the United States.
Usefully, usefulness.
All military units / branches use .mil as their domain suffix.
Ultrasonic or ultrasoundIn medical terminology US has more then one meaning. One meaning is ultrasound. Another meaning is Usher Syndrome.
us
The Indian government maintains Internet portals. The suffix for these portals is gov.in, just as the portal for US government portals has the suffix gov. The gov part stands for government, and the in part stands for India. The Indian Railways is a government controlled entity, and so has the suffix gov.in for its website.
Ultrasound is typically abbreviated u/s, US, or sono.U/S or US is the medical abbreviation for ultrasound.