ummm....... marry-marries
It would be either a prefix or a suffix. Prefix means the letters before, and suffix means the letters after the word.
no, 's' would not be a suffix.
something to do with writing
place
-ette -enne
marry - marries hurry - hurries carry - carries deny - denied
add the suffix
Because "convey" is a VERB and verbs are conjugated and "conveyed" is the past participle.
Because "convey" is a VERB and verbs are conjugated and "conveyed" is the past participle.
When a word ends in a consonant plus y and you add a suffix that doesn't start with an i, you change the y to an i to maintain the correct pronunciation and to follow English language conventions. This helps ensure that the word remains phonetically consistent and is easier to read and understand.
The e is generally dropped from the end of the root word. For example, change + -ed is changed; change + ing is changing.
The e is generally dropped from the end of the root word. For example, change + -ed is changed; change + ing is changing.
The word regress can be changed by adding the affix "-ion", which is a suffix, to create regression.
Before, therefore, are two examples of adding a prefix to -fore.
The word is spelled bluish. The "e" is dropped before adding the suffix "-ish".
You double the final consonant before adding the "ed" suffix if both of the following conditions are met: The word is one syllable The word has a single, short vowel followed by a single consonant at the end (e.g., "run" becomes "running," "swim" becomes "swimming")
The noun forms for the verb to persecute are:persecutor (suffix, 'or')persecution (suffix, 'ion')