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250 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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it. (The book is useless, for many other reasons.) Words formed using prefixes and suffixes, which may seem ... . Other prefixes and suffixes (re-; un-; -ly; -ness, etc.) depend on whether they're
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...and it appears to be a bunch of amino acid prefixes strung together? Sorry, guess my biological background is showing
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. The first run through the alphabet was with suffixes, the second with prefixes, starting in 1983, again
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they're conjugated. Nothing else. This is quite simpler to verbs with separable prefixes
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titles of papers ... milli and micro unit prefixes would have become indistinguishable). Markus Ye4p
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letters as well (at which point the milli and micro unit prefixes would have become indistinguishable
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But that word can be broken up in to like two root words, alot of suffixes and alot of prefixes. All of this debating is really confusing!
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legitimate roots to tack prefixes onto; but Liddell and Scott is still in a box. I would agree
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prefixes with a pretty-much universal pronunciation seem to be the most Dead Common ones, like "
alt.usage.english
by
ross howard
5 yr 169 days ago
Spelling, Dialects, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Interviews, Prefixes, Countries, United States, Speaking, Writing, Suffixes
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English teems with words with negative prefixes that have no simple form gruntled, mayed, etc. As in one of my sig quotes: The Society for the Preservation of Tithesis commends your ebriated
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