Prefix
From Wikinfo
[[de:Pr�?fix]]
In linguistics, a prefix is a type of affix that precedes the morphemes to which it can attach. In English, most prefixes are bound morphemes, meaning that they cannot occur as independent words (excluding citational uses, e.g., saying "Speaking of the prefix, 'un-',...").
Associative prefix
Associative prefixes shows an association. For examples in Old English and German, ge- has the parallel semantics as the Latin com-, such as indicating:
- collectivity. For example, Gebirge, meaning "mountain range", is derived from Berg, meaning "mountain".
- Perfectivity, like past participles.
See also
- list of prefixes
- suffix
- compound verbs in English consisting of Latin prefix and Latin verb
- SI prefix
Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Prefix" [1], used under the GNU Free Documentation License

