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Using Affixes To Find Word Meanings

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Become a Word Detective with Prefixes and Suffixes!

You will learn to use prefixes and suffixes to figure out what unfamiliar words mean when you read.

Introduction

You can become a word detective by learning about special word parts called affixes! When you see a new word, you can look for these parts to help you figure out what the word means. This skill will help you understand more words when you read books and stories.

What Are Affixes?

Affixes are word parts that you add to the beginning or end of words. They change what the word means. When you learn about affixes, you become better at finding unknown words with support.

There are two main types of affixes you will learn about. Prefixes go at the beginning of words. Suffixes go at the end of words.

Common Prefixes You Will Use

The prefix "un-" means "not" or "the opposite." When you see "unhappy," it means "not happy." The prefix "re-" means "again." When you see "retie," it means "tie again."

You might also see "over-" which means "too much." Overcooked means cooked too much. The prefix "under-" means "not enough." Undercooked means not cooked enough.

Common Suffixes You Will Learn

The suffix "-er" means "a person who does something." A farmer is a person who farms. The suffix "-ful" means "full of." Helpful means full of help.

You will also see "-s" at the end of words. This shows you have more than one of something. One cat becomes two cats when you add "-s."

Key Terms & Definitions

Affix: A word part you add to the beginning or end of a word to change its meaning.

Prefix: A word part that goes at the beginning of a word, like "un-" or "re-."

Suffix: A word part that goes at the end of a word, like "-er" or "-ful."

Root Word: The main word before you add any prefixes or suffixes to it.

Un-: A prefix that means "not" or "the opposite," like in "unhappy."

Re-: A prefix that means "again," like in "retie" or "rebuild."

-er: A suffix that means "a person who does something," like "farmer."

-ful: A suffix that means "full of," like "helpful."

Fun Ways to Practice

You can practice by looking for prefixes and suffixes in your favorite books. When you find a word with "un-" or "re-," try to figure out what it means. This connects to connecting words to real life uses.

Play word games where you add prefixes and suffixes to simple words. Start with words you know well, then add word parts to make new words.

What You Already Know

You already know many simple words and their meanings. You can use common nouns and verbs in your speaking. You also understand basic opposites like happy and sad.

These skills help you learn about affixes because you can see how word parts change meanings you already understand.

Related Topics & Connections

Learning about affixes connects to many other language skills. You will use this knowledge when finding multiple meanings of words and questioning unknown words in text.

This topic prepares you for more advanced skills like decoding words using affixes and identifying common root words. You will also build on this when learning about finding word meanings through context.

Understanding affixes helps you with sorting words into categories and understanding word relationships. All these skills work together to make you a stronger reader.