The verb form for honest is "to be honest."
The comparative degree of the word "honest" is "more honest."
What sense of the word honest are you planning on using? An honest lawyer could be crooked, an honest weight could be fraudulent, honest reporting could be disingenuous, honest wages could be unfair or inequitable, honest folk could be pretentious, an honest critique could be insincere, an honest answer could be deceptive
The comparative form of "honest" is "more honest."
The comparative form of "honest" is "more honest," and the superlative form is "most honest."
The prefix of "honest" is "un-".
The prefix that comes before "honest" is "dis-".
dis-honest
Hon-
Prefix: dis- Root word: honest Suffix: -ish
No, "dishonest" is not a word with a prefix. It is a standalone word formed by combining the prefix "dis-" meaning "not" with "honest."
Dishonest
"Dis" is a prefix. "Honesty" is the root word. "ly" would be a suffix, as "Dishonestly".
Dis so it make Dishonest
The prefix of "sincere" is "sin-." A prefix is a group of letters added at the beginning of a word to change its meaning. In this case, "sin-" comes from the Latin word "sine," meaning "without." In "sincere," the prefix "sin-" combined with "cere" means "without wax," indicating something that is genuine or pure.
Prefix=IN
The prefix for inadequate is in-. The prefix in- means not.