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    In linguistics, a prefix is a type of affix that precedes the morphemes to which it can attach. Prefixes are bound morphemes (they cannot occur as independent words).
    While most languages employ both prefixes and suffixes, prefixes are crosslinguistically less common. Some languages employ mostly suffixes and almost no prefixes at all.

    The use of prefixes has been found to correlate statistically with other linguistic features, such as a verb-object word order and the use of prepositions.

    In the Indo-European languages, prefixes are mostly derivational morphemes (inflection is most often marked with suffixes).


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    Associative prefix

    Associative prefixes shows an association. For examples in Old English and German, ge- has the parallel semantics as the Latin com-, such as indicating:
      collectivity. For example, Gebirge, meaning "mountain range", is derived from Berg, meaning "mountain".
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    See also



     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Prefix (linguistics)". link