There are several for each.
Incapable is probably the most common form of capable with a prefix, but quasicapable and overcapable are also valid.
Illegal and paralegal are the most common forms of legal with a prefix, but there are many others: prelegal, postlegal, pseudolegal, quasilegal, extralegal, medicolegal, and even nonlegal.
The prefix is -in, as in "incapable."
The prefix for "capable" is "in-" as in "incapable" which means not capable or lacking the ability to do something.
in- is the prefix of incapable. Uncapable is not an actual word and it can be mistaken for incapable.
The prefix that goes on "reverent" is "ir-".
The prefix that goes with "humane" is "in-" as in "inhumane."
The prefix is -in, as in "incapable."
The prefix for "capable" is "in-" as in "incapable" which means not capable or lacking the ability to do something.
Un
in- is the prefix of incapable. Uncapable is not an actual word and it can be mistaken for incapable.
The suffix of capable is the able part of the word. And the prefix of capable is the cap part in the word. Capable is one of the only words without a root word/base word because of that it has like every word a prefix at the beginning and a suffix at the end. You would use able in a sentence like this:are you able to work and if you used the whole word it would be I am capable of doing my homework. Capable,able or cap(like a hood)in many different ways.
The prefix that goes with "humane" is "in-" as in "inhumane."
The prefix that goes with discipline is "self-".
Indefinite
The prefix that goes on "reverent" is "ir-".
Well, honey, the prefix for "capable" is "in-". So if you add "in-" to "capable," you get "incapable." Just like adding a little salt to a bland dish, it changes the whole flavor of the word.
capable of being
The prefix that goes in front of chip is micro-.