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In linguistics, a suffix (also sometimes termed postfix or ending or, in older literature, affix) is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns or adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Particularly in the study of Semitic languages, a suffix is called an afformative, as they can alter the form of the words. In Indo-European studies, a distinction is made between suffixes and endings (see Proto-Indo-European root). A word-final segment that is somewhere between a free morpheme and a bound morpheme is known as a suffixoid[1] or a semi-suffix[2] (e.g., English -like or German -freundlich 'friendly').
Suffixes can carry grammatical information (inflectional suffixes) or lexical information (derivational suffixes). An inflectional suffix is sometimes called a desinence.[3]
Some examples in European languages:
Many synthetic languages—Czech, German, Finnish, Latin, Hungarian, Russian, Turkish, etc.—use a large number of endings.
Suffixes used in English frequently have Greek, French, or Latin origins.
Inflection changes the grammatical properties of a word within its syntactic category. In the example:
the suffix -ed inflects the root-word fade to indicate past tense.
Inflectional suffixes do not change the word class of the word after inflection.[4] Inflectional suffixes in modern English include:
Derivational suffixes can be divided into two categories, namely class-changing derivation and class-maintaining derivation.[5] Derivational suffixes in modern English include:
Latin literature, Romance languages, Ancient Rome, Rome, Ecclesiastical Latin
Language, Semantics, Noam Chomsky, Sociolinguistics, Semiotics
Russian language, Polish language, Grammatical number, Pronoun, Chinese language
Ethnologue, Arabic language, Aramaic language, Hebrew language, Akkadian language
Suffix, Montana, Grammatical person, Semantics, Vowel length
Tamil language, Suffix, English language, Tamil people, Prefix
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Northeast Caucasian languages, Avar language, Suffix, Khwarshi Proper, Phoneme