So what exactly determines what's a suffix and what's a prefix?
dari ASCarroll, 25 April 2014
Pesan: 6
Bahasa: English
ASCarroll (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 01.08.31
morfran (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 01.18.44
nornen (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 01.28.10
morfran:Like most of the lexicon, Esperanto affixes are modeled on Romance ones, where there are analogous prefixes like pre-, prae-, and proto- and suffixes like -accio, -astro, etc.In which languages are there postfixes "-accio" and "-astro" and what do they mean?
(I just know Spanish "-astro" meaning "step-", like in padrastro or hermanastro.)
(Maybe Italian "-accio" for pejorative?)
morfran (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 01.38.35
nornen:In which languages are there postfixes "-accio" and "-astro" and what do they mean?Italian -accio is the specific suffix Esperanto gets -aĉ- from. It derives from Latin -aster, -astr- “petty”, “incomplete”, and turns up in the Romance languages (and English) in a variety of forms with a variety of pejorative (or semi-pejorative) meanings, including “step-”.
sudanglo (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 10.38.39
Most suffixes act in the same way as normal word building works, but some don't.
Stacidomo (station building) is a sort of domo, just as kombilo (a comb) is a sort of ilo.
But domego (very large building/house) is not a sort of ego, and dometo little building/cottage is not a sort of eto. They are both sorts of domo.
tommjames (Tunjukkan profil) 25 April 2014 14.27.52