USING PREFIXES AND SUFFIXES 37
SUFFIXES
Suffixes are syllables added to the end of words to change or add to their meaning.
They often change a word’s part of speech, thereby also changing how the word
functions in a sentence. Suffixes tell you whether a word is a person, place, or thing
(a noun ); an action or state of being (a verb ); or a modifier, which is a word that
describes (an adjective or adverb ).
HERE’S A HINT
PARTS OF SPEECH
The following table offers a quick reference guide for the main parts of speech.
Part of
Speech Function Examples
noun names a person, place, cloud, Helen, car, Elm Court,
thing, or concept brush, valor
verb shows an action, occurrence, go, jump, feel, imagine, interrupt
or state of being
adjective describes nouns and pronouns; white, oblong, ancient,
can also identify or quantify; exhilarating
tells what kind, which one, that(e.g.,that dog)
how many, how much several(e.g.,several dogs)
adverb describes verbs, adjectives, slowly, clumsily, never, very,
other adverbs, or entire clauses; here, soon
tells where, when, how and to
what extent
For example, look how the suffixes in the following table change the word
antagonist from a noun to an adjective to a verb (and don’t forget to notice the prefix,
ant- ).
Part of
Word Speech Definition
antagonist noun one who opposes or contends with another;
an adversary, opponent
antagonistic adjective opposing, combating, adversarial
antagonize verb to oppose actively, contend; to provoke the
hostility of