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A prefix (affix) is a word, or letter(s) placed at the beginning of another word (a base word) to adjust or qualify its usage or meaning. The opposite of prefix is suffix. ... Simple Guide to Prefixes ... List of English Prefixes...
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www.learnenglish.de/grammar/prefixtext.htm
www.learnenglish.de/grammar/prefixtext.htm
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List of English prefixes like non-, inter- or post-, with meanings and examples. ... This is a list of the most common prefixes in English, together with their basic meaning and some examples. You can find more detail or precision for each prefix in any good dictionary. The origins of words are extremely complicated.
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www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/prefixes.htm
www.englishclub.com/vocabulary/prefixes.htm
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*outside: extra, extro, epi- extraterrestrial, extrovert, epidermis...
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www.e-tme.com/complete%20list%20of%20prefixes%20and%20s...
www.e-tme.com/complete%20list%20of%20prefixes%20and%20suffixes.htm
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from, away, off ... Prefixes and Suffixes...
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www.testprepreview.com/prefixes_suffixes.htm
www.testprepreview.com/prefixes_suffixes.htm
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These words make all the difference because they are supposed to contain the twenty most useful prefixes and the fourteen most important roots and are to be found in over 14,000 words in a collegiate dictionary size or close to an estimated 100,000 words in an unabridged dictionary size. ... He then goes on to list the following:
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www.lexfiles.com/14-words.html
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Based on English Vocabulary Elements, Keith Denning and William Leben, Oxford University Press 1995 ... ambi- / amphi- ... 'both' (has the sense of 'on both sides')
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www.uoregon.edu/~l150web/prefixes.html
www.uoregon.edu/~l150web/prefixes.html
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to, toward, near, in addition to ,by ... aside ,accompany ,adjust ,aggression ,allocate, annihilate ,affix ,associate, attend, adverb ... do, act, drive...
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ueno.cool.ne.jp/let/prefix.html
ueno.cool.ne.jp/let/prefix.html
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You can learn more about English vocabulary by exploring this website. There are lists of vocabulary, roots, prefixes, and suffixes. Exercises and links to other ESL sites will be added as well as a list of words with Old English roots.
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www.southampton.liunet.edu/academic/pau/course/webesl.h...
www.southampton.liunet.edu/academic/pau/course/webesl.htm
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From the example words in the above table, it is easy to see how roots combine with prefixes to form new words. For example, the root -tract-, meaning “to pull,” can combine with a number of prefixes, including de- and re-.
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www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0907036.html
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