The prefix of infinite is "in-".
"Infinite" is from Latin infinitus "unlimited," from the negative prefix in- plus finis "limit, boundary."
The prefix for inadequate is in-. The prefix in- means not.
The prefix for include is in-. This prefix means not.
what prefix does hypothesis have? what prefix does hypothesis have?
The prefix is un-. This prefix means not.
"Infinite" is from Latin infinitus "unlimited," from the negative prefix in- plus finis "limit, boundary."
How about omni- (prefix for "all", "every")? Or perhaps ultra-/hyper- ("beyond", "excessive")?I was looking for the same thing as you, and while this prefix doesn't explicitly refer to an infinite number of items, these options did work in the context I was using. I figured since this question had no answers, a "close enough" one could help :)
In general, poly. Specifically, there are infinite prefixes. Examples include deca, octa, and penta.
Prefix=IN
The prefix for inadequate is in-. The prefix in- means not.
the answer is infinite to the second power
The prefix for include is in-. This prefix means not.
Yes, prefix does have a prefix. The prefix is pur-.
Demi has no prefix; it IS a prefix.
The prefix is in-. This prefix means not.
The prefix is in-. This prefix means not.
The prefix is micro.