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-esce
- a suffix appearing in verbs borrowed from Latin, where it had an inchoative meaning:
convalesce; putresce.
Word History and Origins
Origin of -esce1
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Words That Use -esce
does -esce mean?
The suffix -esce is used to denote verbs that refer to beginning, in the sense of “having become” or “begin to be.” It is occasionally used in everyday and technical terms.
The form -esce comes from the Latin verbal suffix -ŧ, which is an inchoative (also known as inceptive) element meaning “to become, begin to be.” There are two equivalents of -ŧ in English: -en, as in darken and strengthen, and -fy or -ify, as in liquefy or simplify.
are variants of -esce?
While -esce doesn’t have any variants, it is related to the forms -escence in nouns and -escent in adjectives. Want to know more? Read our Words That Use articles about -escence and -escent.
Examples of -esce
One example of a scientific term that uses the suffix -esce is phosphoresce, “to be luminous without sensible heat, as phosphorus.”
The first part of the word is an abbreviation of phosphorus, a chemical that emits a faint glow when exposed to oxygen, from Latin ōǰܲ, meaning “morning star.” The suffix -esce means “to begin to be.” Phosphoresce roughly translates to “to begin to be [like] a star.”
are some words that use the combining form -esce?
- convalesce (using the equivalent form of -esce in Latin)
- effloresce (using the equivalent form of -esce in Latin)
- opalesce
- putresce
are some other forms that -esce may be commonly confused with?
Break it down!
The Latin word for “to be well” is ŧ (stem val-). With this in mind, what does convalesce mean?
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