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Niwantha
Can "specific" be considered as a suffix?
Hi friends,
Can "specific" be considered as a suffix (a letter or group of letters added at the end of a word which makes a new word)?
e.g.
gender-specific
location-specific
country-specific
Thanks in advance!
Niwantha
Nov 7, 2018 12:19 AM
Answers · 5
4
Suffixes are not words, but endings tagged on to words.
-tion
-ly
-ment
-ness
None of these mean anything by themselves; they are not discrete words.
specific is a word, an adjective. "Gender-specific" is a compound adjective, an adjective formed by combining two words (adj-adj, adj-noun, noun-verb)
Other examples:
age-old -- two adjectives
a ten-year mortgage - adj-noun
man-eating tiger - noun-verb
November 7, 2018
1
A morpheme is the smallest grammatical unit in a language. A morpheme is not identical to a word, and the principal difference between the two is that a morpheme may or may not stand alone, whereas a word, by definition, is freestanding.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morpheme
November 7, 2018
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Niwantha
Language Skills
English, Sinhala
Learning Language
English
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