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I am aware that its one M No. It's two m 's. There is no general rule. panel has one n . flannel has two n 's. These rhyming words should both take the same pattern! The least often doubled are h, j, k, q, v, w, x, y . It would be a
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Hello Grammar Teacher/Teachers,
1. Could you teach me how and when to use suffixes and prefixes that are available from the dictionaries,for example, to form a noun,a verb and an adjective ?
Thank you.
With best wishes.
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When it comes to above and below used as adjectives, I
prefer them after the noun. Some people insist that they can be
used in front of the nouns, but that grates on my ear as much as the asleep man or saying We did that the before time instead
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Miles -- I don't mean to be too discouraging, but "performaly" is not a word. I'm not even sure what an adjective form of a verb would be, unless you mean somehing like "a performing bear," in which case you would use the gerund. Not all parts of
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Hi! I'd like to ask anybody. How can I easely learn prefixes an suffixes. Is there a dictionary what can easely help me? For instance, I can have the verb perform. Noun is performance, person is performer, adjective is performaly, and negative
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I don't think I understand the question. Nouns, adjectives, and
adverbs are called parts of speech. Is that the terminology
you're looking for? The study of how words are put together using
meaningful prefixes and suffixes like -ness, -able,
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Wow, I had the same question, but with help from this thread, I got enough ideas to formulate some solutions of my own. Thank you! As for starter ideas, I thought of the terms: humanity/humanitarian, just, compassion, chivalrous, civil/civic,
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Hi,
What do these 2 prefixes mean?
de- Derived from the Latin de = from, down from. eg
activate / deactivate make active, make 'from' being active
compose / decompose bring elements together, take elements 'from' each other
e- a
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I don't know of a site like that.
Initial s is pronounced /s/, except in sure and sugar , where it is pronounced /S/*.
Medial s is problematic. There are no hard-and-fast rules -- mostly just lists.
In -ssion or -ssure, the double
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Hello.
I know this could be a too broad question but I'd like to know what are the most common suffixes and prefixes for verbs, adjectives and nouns. Can you write them according to your experience with the language?
Or where can I find this
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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