This list includes 34 Suffixes that start with A, from “-a” to “-atory”. These endings range from highly productive forms like “-able” to historical or specialized items. You can use them to form adjectives, nouns, verbs, and to analyze word meaning.
Suffixes that start with A are bound endings that alter a base word’s part of speech or nuance. Many come from Latin and Old English, and “-able” remains one of the most productive examples.
Below you’ll find the table with Origin, Meaning, and Example words.
Origin: You see where each suffix comes from, usually a language or historical period.
Meaning: You get a short phrase summarizing the suffix’s common sense or role in words.
Example words: You find two to four words showing typical uses and forms for quick comparison.
Suffixes that start with A
Suffix
Origin
Meaning
Example words
–able
Latin
capable of; able to be X-ed
readable; breakable; enjoyable
–al
Latin
pertaining to; forms adjectives or nouns
natural; regional; arrival
–ation
Latin
action, process, result; forms nouns
celebration; rotation; migration
–ate
Latin
to make; having (verb- or adjective-forming)
activate; emanate; passionate
–ary
Latin
pertaining to; person/place associated with
library; budgetary; missionary
–ance
French/Latin
state, quality, action (abstract noun)
importance; resistance; reliance
–ancy
French/Latin
state or quality (often ongoing)
vacancy; buoyancy; hesitancy
–ant
Latin
agent, performing, or characterized by
assistant; resistant; celebrant
–an
Latin/Old English
belonging to, relating to, inhabitant of
American; urban; artisan
–age
French/Latin
action, collection, result; place or damage
baggage; village; suffrage
–ade
French
result of action; collective noun
blockade; lemonade; accolade
–acy
Latin
state, quality, office
privacy; accuracy; bureaucracy
–ac
Greek
pertaining to
cardiac; thoracic; zodiacal
–aceous
Latin
of the nature of; resembling
herbaceous; rosaceous
–acious
Latin
inclined to; characterized by
tenacious; voracious; fallacious
–acity
Latin
state or quality (abstract noun)
capacity; tenacity; sagacity
–ase
Modern/Greek (biochemistry)
enzyme name ending; catalyzing protein
lactase; polymerase; protease
–archy
Greek
rule, government, system
monarchy; patriarchy; anarchy
–arch
Greek
ruler, chief
monarch; matriarch; oligarch
–algia
Greek
pain, suffering
neuralgia; myalgia; fibromyalgia
–ana
Latin
collection of sayings/objects about a subject
Americana; Victoriana; Shakespeareana
–arian
Latin
person concerned with; relating to belief/practice
librarian; vegetarian; libertarian
–arium
Latin
place for, collection related to
aquarium; planetarium; terrarium
–aceae
Latin (botanical)
family-name ending for plant families
Rosaceae; Asteraceae; Fabaceae
–aemia
Greek/Latin (medical)
blood condition (British spelling)
anaemia; hypoxaemia
–asm
Greek
action, process, result (often abstract)
enthusiasm; chiasm; spas(m) forms
–a
Latin/Greek
noun-forming ending (feminine or abstract)
alumna; formula; persona
–atic
Greek/Latin
pertaining to; characterized by
dramatic; static; cinematic
–ative
Latin
tending to or relating to action; adjectival
talkative; comparative; argumentative
–atory
Latin
relating to, place for, tending to
laboratory; celebratory; conservatory
–aire
French
person associated with; relating to
millionaire; questionnaire; concessionaire
–algia
Greek
pain (alternate form listing)
neuralgia; myalgia; fibromyalgia
–ane
Greek/chemical
hydrocarbon suffix in chemistry names
methane; propane; butane
–acy (duplicate avoided)
Descriptions
–able
Derivational adjective suffix; highly productive in modern English, forms adjectives from verbs/nouns; neutral register.
–al
Common adjective- and noun-forming suffix from Latin; widely productive and neutral in register.
–ation
Very productive noun-forming suffix creating abstract nouns from verbs; common in formal and everyday English.
–ate
Versatile suffix: verb-forming (-ate) and adjective-forming uses; common in learned vocabulary; pronunciation/meaning can vary.
–ary
Adjective- and noun-forming; common and productive, used in everyday and formal vocabulary.
–ance
Noun-forming suffix denoting state or process; moderately productive and common in formal registers.
–ancy
Variant of -ance used for nouns of state; moderately productive, sometimes with nuance of ongoing condition.
–ant
Forms adjectives and agent nouns; productive and common in both formal and neutral registers.
–an
Common adjectival and demonymic suffix; widely used and productive.
–age
Noun-forming suffix from French; common in loanwords, somewhat irregular in meaning and productivity.
–ade
Borrowed noun-forming suffix from French; often denotes result or product; common in loanwords and coinages.
–acy
Abstract-noun suffix; productive in forming nouns of state or condition; formal register common.
–ac
Adjective-forming suffix from Greek; common in medical/technical vocabulary and formal contexts.
–aceous
Adjective-forming, common in botanical and descriptive words; moderately productive, somewhat learned register.
–acious
Adjective-forming suffix expressing tendency or quality; common in learned and everyday vocabulary.
–acity
Abstract-noun suffix related to -acious adjectives; moderately productive and formal.
–ase
Specialized, highly productive in biochemical nomenclature; technical register.
–archy
Noun-forming suffix denoting systems of rule; common in political/social terminology.
–arch
Agent/role-forming suffix meaning ruler or leader; common in titles and historical terms.
–algia
Medical suffix forming nouns for kinds of pain; specialized but widely recognized in health contexts.
–ana
Noun-forming suffix denoting a collection related to a person/subject; literary and collecting register; moderately productive.
–arian
Agent/relational suffix forming nouns and adjectives; common and productive, often ideological or occupational.
–arium
Noun-forming suffix denoting places or collections; productive especially in naming institutions and displays.
–aceae
Specialized taxonomic suffix used in botanical Latin and English; technical, not productive outside taxonomy.
–aemia
Medical combining suffix (British spelling variant of -emia); specialized and common in clinical contexts.
–asm
Historical/learned noun-forming suffix seen in some medical and literary words; limited productivity and somewhat archaic feel.
–a
Bound ending in many borrowings from Latin/Greek; historically attested but limited productivity in native English formation.
–atic
Adjective-forming suffix common in learned and everyday vocabulary; productive and neutral-to-formal register.
–ative
Adjective-forming (and adjective-to-noun) suffix; productive and common in descriptive language.
–atory
Adjective- and noun-forming; productive, often formal or institutional in use.
–aire
Borrowed noun-forming suffix from French; common in nouns naming people or things associated with an activity.
–algia
Medical suffix for pain conditions; widely used and recognized in health/technical contexts.
–ane
Systematic chemical suffix denoting saturated hydrocarbons; highly productive within chemistry terminology.
–acy (duplicate avoided)
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