This list includes 30 Suffixes that start with E, from “-ectomy” to “-ey”. They range from productive modern endings to specialized or historical forms and help form nouns, verbs, and adjectives. They are useful for students, writers, ESL learners, and editors.

Suffixes that start with E are word endings that modify meaning or word class, such as “-en” and “-ectomy”. Many come from Latin or Old English, and a few like “-ectomy” reflect specialized medical usage.

Below you’ll find the table with origin, meaning, and example words.

Origin: Shows the language or period where a suffix comes from, so you can assess historical or loanword patterns.

Meaning: Gives a short, practical gloss of the suffix so you quickly understand how it changes a base word.

Example words: Lists two to four common words using the suffix so you see real usage and formation patterns.

Suffixes that start with E

Suffix Origin Meaning Example words Description
ed Old English past tense / past participle walked, jumped, learned Common inflectional ending marking past or past participle; highly productive in regular verbs.
er Old English agent noun / comparative adjective teacher, runner, taller, newer Dual-purpose suffix: makes agent nouns (teacher) and comparatives (taller); extremely productive and common.
est Old English superlative adjective biggest, fastest, warmest Superlative inflection for adjectives and adverbs; widely used in everyday English.
es Old English plural / 3rd-person singular present boxes, watches, goes, does Variant of -s used after sibilant or voiceless endings; marks plurals or verb agreement.
en Old English make/become; verb/adjective forming golden, shorten, strengthen, eaten Forms adjectives (golden) and verbs (shorten); also appears as past-participle marker in irregular verbs.
ee French/Latin recipient, patient, beneficiary employee, escapee, lessee, interviewee Noun-forming suffix denoting the person affected by an action; productive, common in legal/occupational terms.
eer French/Dutch agent, specialist, occupation engineer, volunteer, mountaineer, profiteer Agentive suffix often for occupations or specialists; productive and common in borrowings and coinages.
ess Latin/French feminine agent or role actress, goddess, waitress, stewardess Feminine marker for nouns; historically productive but sometimes avoided now for gender-neutral language.
ery Old French place, trade, collection, quality bakery, pottery, trickery, bravery Noun-forming suffix for places, trades, collectives, or qualities; fairly productive.
esque French in the style of, resembling picturesque, Kafkaesque, statuesque Adds “in the style of” meaning; used for artistic or critical descriptors.
ette French diminutive or feminine kitchenette, cigarette, majorette, suffragette Diminutive/feminine suffix from French; productive for informal coinages and loanwords.
et Old French diminutive, small (loanwords) ringlet, booklet, clarinet, tablet Diminutive suffix found in many loanwords; less productive today but common in established words.
ese Italian/Portuguese language or people, origin Chinese, Portuguese, Sudanese, Siamese Denotes nationality, language, or origin; standard in demonyms and language names.
ence Latin state or quality (noun) presence, reference, dependence, patience Abstract noun-forming suffix indicating state, quality, or action; common in Latinate vocabulary.
ency Latin state, condition, or office (noun) urgency, fluency, dependency, latency Noun-forming variant of -ence often emphasizing condition, function, or office.
ent Latin adjectival / agentive noun dependent, student, fluent, correspondent Forms adjectives and agent nouns in Latinate vocabulary; common and productive in learned words.
escent Latin becoming; in the process of pubescent, incandescent, obsolescent Adjectival suffix meaning “becoming” or “beginning to be”; used for developmental or processual states.
escence Latin process or state of becoming adolescence, fluorescence, coalescence Noun form of -escent denoting a process, state, or condition.
eous Latin/Old French adjectival “having the quality of” courageous, gaseous, advantageous Adjectival ending (variant of -ous) from Latinate sources; common in many learned words.
emic Greek/medical pertaining to a condition or region endemic, epidemic, pandemic Adjectival combining form used in medicine and epidemiology; productive in scientific contexts.
emia Greek/medical blood condition or disease state anemia, leukemia, septicemia Medical noun-forming combining form indicating blood-related conditions; common in clinical terminology.
ectomy Greek/medical surgical removal of something appendectomy, tonsillectomy, vasectomy Combining form for surgical removal; highly productive in medical nomenclature.
esthesia Greek/medical sensation, perception anesthesia, paresthesia, hypesthesia Medical combining form relating to sensation or perception; used in clinical and technical terms.
eth Old English archaic 3rd-person singular verb ending speaketh, goeth, hath Early Modern English verb inflection; now archaic or stylistic (poetry, liturgical).
ern Old English relating to direction/place; adjectival western, southern, northern, eastern Forms regional or directional adjectives; common in geographic and descriptive terms.
eur French agent/result in loanwords amateur, connoisseur, chauffeur, marguerite? Borrowed French agentive/nominal suffix; not productive in English but common in many loanwords.
end Latin (gerundive) thing to be / noun from Latin participle dividend, stipend, reverend, moribund? Fossilized Latin gerundive/nominal element in certain nouns; not productive in modern English.
ey Old Norse/Old English island/place-name element Jersey, Orkney, Guernsey Place-name suffix meaning “island”; lexical in toponyms, not generally productive in everyday vocabulary.
ene Greek/chemical hydrocarbon double-bond (chemical) ethene, benzene, propene, fluorene Productive chemical nomenclature suffix indicating an alkene or certain ring systems; common in scientific terms.
ella Latin/Italian diminutive or feminine (loanwords) novella, patella, Mozzarella, Cinderella Diminutive/feminine suffix common in loanwords and scientific names; present but not highly productive in general English.

Descriptions

ed
er
est
es
en
ee
eer
ess
ery
esque
ette
et
ese
ence
ency
ent
escent
escence
eous
emic
emia
ectomy
esthesia
eth
ern
eur
end
ey
ene
ella
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