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ary
1[ air-ee ]
adjective
- any; anyone.
- none, not any; nary.
-ary
2- a suffix occurring originally in loanwords from Classical and Medieval Latin, on adjectives ( elementary; honorary; stationary; tributary ), personal nouns ( actuary; notary; secretary ), or nouns denoting objects, especially receptacles or places ( library; rosary; glossary ). The suffix has the general sense “pertaining to, connected with” the referent named by the base; it is productive in English, sometimes with the additional senses “contributing to,” “for the purpose of,” and usually forming adjectives:
complimentary; visionary; revolutionary; inflationary.
-ary
suffix
- forming adjectives of; related to; belonging to
cautionary
rudimentary
- forming nouns
- a person connected with or engaged in
missionary
- a thing relating to; a place for
commentary
aviary
Word History and Origins
Origin of ary1
Word History and Origins
Origin of ary1
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Words That Use -ary
does -ary mean?
The combining form -ary is a suffix with a variety of meanings. In some words, it is used to denote an object, particularly a receptacle or place. In some other terms, it is used to mean “pertaining to; connected with.” Additionally, in some English terms it means “contributing to” or “for the purpose of.” It is often used in everyday and technical terms.
The form -ary comes from the Latin -ܲ and -ܳ, meaning “thing connected with or employed in, place for.” By way of French, English has inherited numerous suffixes with similar meanings to that of -ary, including -aire, as in millionaire; -eer, as in engineer; -er, as in archer; or -ier, as in financier. Check out all four entries to learn more.
Examples of -ary
An example of a word you may have encountered that features -ary library, “a place set apart to contain books, periodicals, and other material for reading.” Library comes from the Latin ܲ, which uses the equivalent of the suffix -ary in that language.
The libr- part of the word means “book,” from Latin liber. The -ary part of the word here means “pertaining to; connected with.” Library literally translates to “pertaining to books.”
are some words that use the equivalent of the combining form -ary in Latin?
are some other forms that -ary may be commonly confused with?
Not every word that ends with the exact letters -ary, such as luminary or weary, is necessarily using the suffix -ary to denote “pertaining to.” Learn why luminary means “a celestial body” at our entry for the word.
Break it down!
Given the meaning of the suffix -ary, what does planetary literally translate to?
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