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What do you take away from a word to find its roots ?

User FredL
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2 Answers

12 votes

Answer:

(see below)

Step-by-step explanation:

You can take away prefixes (like il-, intra-, un-, in-) and suffixes (-tion, -sion, -ation, -fy, -itis).

For example, in the word:

transportation

trans- is the prefix meaning "across, over, or beyond"

ation- is the suffix "indicating an action, process, state, condition, or result"

If we break apart the word to find its root word, then we have:

trans port ation

port - root word meaning "to carry"

User Anubha
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9 votes

Answer:

Many of the words we use in our daily language come from a root word. Once you pull off any prefixes or suffixes, the root is usually what remains. For example, “egotist” has a root word of “ego” plus the suffix "-ist." “Acting” has the root word “act”; “-ing” is merely the suffix.

Step-by-step explanation:

User Utdrmac
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