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Root Words, Roots and Affixes. Many English words are formed by taking basic words and adding combinations of prefixes and suffixes to them. A basic word to which affixes (prefixes and suffixes) are added is called a root word because it forms the basis of a new word. The root word is also a word in its own right. For example, the word lovely consists of the word love and the suffix -ly. In contrast, a root is the basis of a new word, but it does not typically form a stand-alone word on its own. For example, the word reject is made up of the prefix re- and the Latin root ject, which is not a stand-alone word. Common Latin and Greek roots Download a copy of the Common Latin Roots chart below. Download a copy of the Common Greek Roots chart below. Affixes One method of understanding the meanings of new words is to analyze the different parts of the word and the meanings of those parts. Download a copy of the Common Prefixes chart below. Download a copy of the Common Suffixes chart below.

Use Greek and Latin roots as clues to the meanings of words (5th grade language arts practice) Dictionary.com | Find the Meanings and Definitions of Words at Dictionary.com. Amor Vincit Omnia - Latin Words to Live By ("Love Conquers All" & More) | Merriam-Webster. Words at Play : Top 10 Latin Words to Live By Over the centuries, certain Latin phrases have been used widely enough in English to get included in the dictionary.

This list contains some of our favorites. What It Means: "love conquers all things" Where It Comes From: Shortly before the start of the first millennium, the Roman poet Virgil wrote "love conquers all things; let us too surrender to Love. " The phrase and the concept (in Latin and in English) caught on: a character in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, written in the late 1300s, wore a brooch engraved "Amor Vincit Omnia"; Caravaggio used the phrase as the title of his painting of Cupid in the early seventeenth century; the twentieth century poet Edgar Bowers reinterpreted the phrase all over again in the poem with that title.

Photo: nicolrene.tumblr.com. 21 Interesting Facts About The English Language - Reading Addicts. English is such a wonderful language, born from so many other tongues and so rich in texture and depth. The Oxford English Dictionary gives us over 600,000 entries and thanks to evolution, corruptions, misinterpretations and altercations, the language throws up some interesting quirks. There are so many words, many archaic, and many words that mean almost the same thing, but thanks to the way our language is created and evolves, it throws up some interesting quirks. So we’ve put a few fascinating facts about the language together for you and we hope you enjoy them! Only two English words end in ‘–gry’ these are angry and hungry. We can’t help but think these two things are connected. The word bookkeeper is the only unhyphenated English word with three consecutive double letters. The longest non-medical word in the English dictionary is floccinaucinihilipilification.

A repdigit is a number comprising of repeated digits, such as 2,222 or $9.99. Scarecrows were once known as hobidy-boobies. Online.