Page 25 - English Vocabulary in Use Pre Intermediate
P. 25
Adjective suffixes
Suffixes change word class, e.g. from verb to noun or noun to adjective, but they can also
change meaning (see sections B and C below).
Noun or verb + suffix
Noun or Verb Suffix Adjectives
danger, fame -ous dangerous, famous (= well-known)
music, politics -al musical, political, industrial,
industry, economics economical (= saves you money)
cloud, fog, sun, dirt -y cloudy, foggy, sunny, dirty (¥ clean)
attract, create -ive attractive (= pretty, nice to look at); creative (= able
to produce new ideas; with imagination)
Note: Sometimes there is a spelling change. Here are common examples:
double the consonant, e.g. sun/sunny, fog/foggy
leave out the final ‘e’, e.g. create/creative, fame/famous
leave out the final ‘s’ before ‘al’, e.g. politics/political; economics/economical
change ‘y’ to ‘i’ before ‘al’, e.g. industry/industrial
-able /abl/
This suffix (also -ible in some words) is used to form many adjectives from nouns or verbs:
enjoyable, comfortable, knowledgeable (= knows a lot), suitable (= right/correct for a
particular situation).
Quite often, -able (and -ible) has the meaning ‘can be done’. For example, something that is
washable ‘can be washed’. Other examples include:
drinkable, comprehensible (= can be comprehended or understood), reliable (= can be relied
on or trusted, e.g. a car or other machine that never goes wrong or breaks down).
Words ending -able quite often express the opposite meaning by adding the prefix un-:
undrinkable, unreliable, unbreakable (= cannot be broken), unsuitable, uncomfortable
Words ending -ible add the prefix in-:
incomprehensible, inflexible (somebody who is inflexible has a fixed idea about something
and cannot change quickly or easily; an inflexible timetable cannot be changed easily);
inedible (= cannot be eaten).
-ful and -less
The suffix -ful often means ‘full of + the meaning of the adjective: careful, you are full of
care; if you are helpful you are full of help. Other examples are: painful (= hurts a lot),
useful, and thoughtful (= someone who is thoughtful is kind and always thinks about
others; a thoughtful action shows care for others)
The suffix -less means ‘without’ + the meaning of the adjective: if you are careless, you do
something ‘without care’. Other examples are: painless, useless (= has no use or function)
thoughtless, jobless and homeless (= with nowhere to live)
Note: You can see that -ful and -less are often used with the same words to form opposites.
This is not always true: a person with a home is NOT hemefet.
22 English Vocabulary in Use (pre-intermediate & intermediate)