When you need to make a noun of an action. For instance: contort - a verb meaning to twist or bend. Add -tion to speak of it as a noun, as in: "that contortion was lame-o". It's really -ion, though. It's just that it gets added to verbs ending in 't', or 'se'.
Some singular nouns that end with 'tion' are:abbreviationabsolutionaccelerationactionaddictionaffectionafflictionagitationaggregationaviationobligationobservationoccupationoperationoptionorganizationornamentationosculationovationovulation
Ifind separating words from their suffixes somewhat easy. 1. You can look up the word in your dictionary, and it should give you the word with out it's suffix. 2. Think it through.A suffix is an ending to a word. The ending of deliberation is tion, deliberation without tion is delibera, whats a words similar to this? deliberate. And there you have it. HopeI helped
Examples of words ending in -tion:abductionactionauctionbeautificationcausationcautiondonationdurationeducationemotionfictionfractioninductionlotionmentionmotionnationnotionoperationoptionpartitionpetitionportionpositionpotionrotationsanitationsatisfactionsituationstationtaxationtuitionvacation
The suffix in "application" is "-tion." Suffixes are letters or group of letters added to the end of a root word to change its meaning or form. In this case, the suffix "-tion" is added to the root word "apply" to change it into a noun form.
Words that end in -tion usually come from Latin, while words that end in -sion usually come from Latin or French. There isn't a strict rule, but -tion is more common and originates from Latin verbs ending in -tio, while -sion more often comes from Latin or French words ending in -sio or -sion.
The noun is spelled inspection.
microreproduction, photoreproduction
"Beautification" is a noun, as are most words that end in "-tion"
no a suffix is a bit that fixes on to the end of a word, like -tion ocean is an actual word JJ3001
I think the answer you want is "nouns" . tion and sion are suffixes that change a verb into a noun. eg. associate -> association . The trick is to know which ending to use.
Adding -tion to the end of a word, usually a verb, changes it into a noun. Preparation is the act of preparing, and imagination is the act of imagining.
If the subject the verb is modifying is feminine, then there is an E placed after.