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"FI-" vs "-ACX-"

貼文者: Zefo96, 2014年7月10日

訊息: 5

語言: English

Zefo96 (顯示個人資料) 2014年7月10日下午3:26:27

Could someone please tell me the difference between the prefix "fi-" and the infix "-acx-"?

The vortaro in the side-bar of the Lernu website defines "fi-" as "nasty" and "-acx-" as "awful, rotten, terrible", but those seem pretty similar to me. Perhaps the difference is in their use?

michaleo (顯示個人資料) 2014年7月10日下午3:45:02

Zefo96 (顯示個人資料) 2014年7月10日下午3:55:51

michaleo:FI-
-AĈ-
Ah, OK, thanks. That makes more sense. I do have a follow-up question now, though: is there any reason one couldn't use both in one word? For example, in the link, "kuracistacxo" is defined as a "quack". Could one say "fikuracistacxo", for a doctor who is immoral as well as ineffective?

Furthermore, is there a limit on the number of affixes you can use in one word?

michaleo (顯示個人資料) 2014年7月10日下午4:06:41

Zefo96:
michaleo:FI-
-AĈ-
Ah, OK, thanks. That makes more sense. I do have a follow-up question now, though: is there any reason one couldn't use both in one word? For example, in the link, "kuracistacxo" is defined as a "quack". Could one say "fikuracistacxo", for a doctor who is immoral as well as ineffective?

Furthermore, is there a limit on the number of affixes you can use in one word?
There's no limit but you shouldn't make words too long because it's unnatural and ineffective. Fikuracistaĉo is quite good.

Zefo96 (顯示個人資料) 2014年7月10日下午4:39:13

michaleo:
Zefo96:
michaleo:FI-
-AĈ-
Ah, OK, thanks. That makes more sense. I do have a follow-up question now, though: is there any reason one couldn't use both in one word? For example, in the link, "kuracistacxo" is defined as a "quack". Could one say "fikuracistacxo", for a doctor who is immoral as well as ineffective?

Furthermore, is there a limit on the number of affixes you can use in one word?
There's no limit but you shouldn't make words too long because it's unnatural and ineffective. Fikuracistaĉo is quite good.
Great, makes sense. Thank you.

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