Stupendous because ous is the affix of "full of" :)
The affix "-ious" is used to form adjectives and means "having the quality of" or "full of." It is often used to indicate a characteristic or quality of something.
verbose
No, "full" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes something that is complete or contains as much as it can hold. Prepositions typically show the relationship between nouns and other words in a sentence.
suffix icious means full of eg. avaricious - full of greed
full of hate.
The affix "-ious" is used to form adjectives and means "having the quality of" or "full of." It is often used to indicate a characteristic or quality of something.
curious
verbose
The string in the question contains two full stops: it is not a number in a recognised form.
The Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary contains full entries for 171,476 words in current use, and 47,156 obsolete words.
In this case acid is not a prefix, but -ic is the suffix...it means full of acid or contains acid.
No, "full" is not a preposition. It is an adjective that describes something that is complete or contains as much as it can hold. Prepositions typically show the relationship between nouns and other words in a sentence.
suffix icious means full of eg. avaricious - full of greed
It's based on the adjective full, which generally means to be filled. So useful, teaspoonful, and resentful mean being full of use and of resentment, and filling a teaspoon. Dictionaries tend to come up with other words to describe such words to which the suffix -ful has been added. So they may describe resentful as characterized by resentment, teaspoonful as much as will fill a teaspoon, and useful as tending to be useful.
A full p orbital contains 6 electrons.
Full means complete.
It means to use full sentences in your response rather than a few words or phrases.