identify the major derivational suffixes of English and classify them according to the scheme of classification
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Suffixes
A suffix is a group of letters placed at the end of a word to make a new word. A suffix can make a new word in one of two ways:
inflectional (grammatical): for example, changing singular to plural (dog → dogs), or changing present tense to past tense (walk → walked). In this case, the basic meaning of the word does not change.
derivational (the new word has a new meaning, "derived" from the original word): for example, teach → teacheror care → careful
Hope This Helps
A suffix is a group of letters placed at the end of a word to make a new word. A suffix can make a new word in one of two ways:
inflectional (grammatical): for example, changing singular to plural (dog → dogs), or changing present tense to past tense (walk → walked). In this case, the basic meaning of the word does not change.
derivational (the new word has a new meaning, "derived" from the original word): for example, teach → teacheror care → careful
Hope This Helps
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