That wants to be "land." I realize that's not three letters.
The word is land.
land
Endings are added as suffixes to roots in the English language. A suffix is a group of letters added to the end of a word to change its meaning or function. Prefixes, on the other hand, are added at the beginning of a word.
Adding the prefix "land" to "grass" gives "grassland," and adding the suffix "scape" to "scape" gives "landscape."
A suffix is typically added to the end of a word to modify its meaning or form. Prefixes, on the other hand, are added to the beginning of a word.
A prefix is found at the beginning of a word and is added to the base word to create a new word with a slightly different meaning. Prefixes can change the grammatical role or tense of words and are common in English and many other languages.
Rehab, but they added something in the beginning.
It is where all the ingredients are added at the beginning, as opposed to making a 'sponge' then adding other ingredients later.
The word because is perfectly acceptable at the beginning of an English sentence, and indeed there is no word in English that may not begin a sentence. A format that forbids because or any other English word from beginning an English sentence is irretrievably faulty.
posthaste
No, not everything is a prefix. Prefixes are specific types of affixes that are added to the beginning of a word to change its meaning. Other affixes, such as suffixes and infixes, are added to different parts of words.
the answer is principio, but I want to know if there are other English words that contain that latin root?
Other names for cavalrymen are be horse soldiers or mounted soldiers. I don't know of any in English beginning with C; you might use chargers.
there are chemicals in the grass