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combining form

noun

, Grammar.
  1. a linguistic form that occurs only in combination with other forms. In word formation, a combining form may conjoin with an independent word ( mini- + skirt ), another combining form ( photo- + -graphy ), or an affix ( cephal- + -ic ); it is thus distinct from an affix, which can be added to either a free word or a combining form but not solely to another affix ( Iceland + -ic or cephal- + -ic but not pro- + -ic ). There are three types of combining forms: (1) forms borrowed from Greek or Latin that are derivatives of independent nouns, adjectives, or verbs in those languages; these combining forms, used in the formation of learned coinages, often semantically parallel independent words in English (cf., for example, cardio- in relation to heart, -phile in relation to lover ) and usually appear only in combination with other combining forms of Greek or Latin origin ( bibliophile, not bookphile ); (2) the compounding form of a free-standing English word; such a combining form usually has only a single, restricted sense of the free word, and may differ from the word phonetically. Compare -proof, -wide, -worthy, -land, -man; (3) a form extracted from an existing free word and used as a bound form, typically maintaining the meaning of the free word, or some facet of it. Compare heli- 2, mini-, para- 3, -aholic, -gate, -orama. Note that the term “combining form” does not specify placement before or after the element to which the form is attached.


combining form

noun

  1. a linguistic element that occurs only as part of a compound word, such as anthropo- in anthropology


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Word History and Origins

Origin of combining form1

First recorded in 1880–85

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Example Sentences

Hydro: relating to water: a combining form used as a prefix.

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