This list includes 15 Suffixes that start with L, from “-land” to “-lysis”. They commonly form place names, nouns for processes, or adjectives describing qualities, useful for writing and vocabulary study.

Suffixes that start with L are bound morphemes added to stems to change meaning or word class. For example, “-land” reflects Old English place-name formation, while “-lysis” reached English via Greek in scientific vocabulary.

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

Origin (language/period): You see where each suffix comes from, which helps explain historical usage and modern meaning.

Meaning (short phrase): This gives a brief definition so you quickly grasp how the suffix changes a word’s sense.

Example words (2–4): You get two to four real words showing the suffix in context, useful for study and writing.

Suffixes that start with L

SuffixOriginMeaningExamples
lessOld Englishwithout; lackinghopeless, fearless, childless, useless
letOld Frenchsmall; diminutivebooklet, piglet, droplet, leaflet
lingOld Englishsmall, young, or pejorativeduckling, underling, gosling, yearling
lyOld Englishin manner; characteristic ofquickly, friendly, manly, lonely
likeOld Englishsimilar to; characteristic ofchildlike, warlike, lifelike, businesslike
logyGreekstudy or science ofbiology, geology, anthropology, psychology
logueGreek/Old Frenchspeech, discourse; noun-formingdialogue, monologue, travelogue, catalogue
logModern Englishrecord or discourse; clipped formweblog, travelog, vlog, audiolog
logistGreekspecialist; practitionerbiologist, geologist, neurologist, lexicologist
lithGreekstone; rockmegalith, monolith, acrolith, lithic (related)
lysisGreekloosening; breakdown, analysisanalysis, hydrolysis, dialysis, electrolysis
lapseLatinto slip, fall; lapserelapse, elapse, collapse
longOld Englishhaving the specified length or durationdaylong, yearlong, season-long, weeklong
landOld Englishland; territory or regionEngland, Iceland, woodland, highland
leOld Englishverb-forming frequentative; diminutivesparkle, dribble, toddle, rattle

Descriptions

less
Highly productive adjective-forming suffix from Old English meaning “without.” Widely used in modern English; very productive for negatives and abstract nouns.
let
Diminutive suffix from Old French/Latin. Common and productive for small items or affectionate forms; sometimes interchangeable with French -ette in loanwords.
ling
Old English diminutive/derivational suffix. Produces diminutives and sometimes pejoratives; still productive though sense varies by word.
ly
Adverbial and adjective-forming suffix from OE lic; extremely productive. Homonymous historical sources; forms many adjectives and corresponding adverbs.
like
Productive adjectival suffix meaning “resembling” or “characteristic of.” Common in both formal and informal coinages; sometimes used colloquially for nonce-words.
logy
Learned combining form from Greek -logia. Very productive in academic and technical vocabulary; often appears as -ology in common use.
logue
Noun-forming variant of -logy via French. Standard in many set words; British spellings often prefer -logue. Less productive for new coinages than -logy.
log
Recent clipped form of -logue/-logy used for “record” or “account” (vlog, travelog). Highly productive in informal and digital coinages.
logist
Combining form meaning “one who studies or specializes in.” Productive in academic/professional nouns; borrowed via Latin from Greek -logistēs.
lith
Combining form from Greek lithos “stone.” Common in archaeology and geology; bound morpheme used in technical terms.
lysis
Combining form from Greek lysis “loosening.” Very common in scientific and medical vocabulary; productive for process/condition terms.
lapse
From Latin lapsus; appears in verbs and nouns denoting slipping or falling back. Found in learned words; moderately productive in technical/medical contexts.
long
Suffix forming adjectives/adverbs meaning “lasting the length of.” Common in compounds (often hyphenated); moderately productive.
land
Bound element used in place-names and compounds denoting territory. Historically common and still productive in toponyms and nouns.
le
Orthographic final -le represents a productive verb/noun-forming ending (frequentative or diminutive). Morphologically opaque in many stems; productivity varies by word.
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