This list includes 36 Suffixes that start with P, from “-parous” to “-pterous”. These endings include productive modern forms, classical borrowings, and specialized scientific terms. You can use them to form adjectives, nouns, or technical descriptors.
Suffixes that start with P are word endings added to roots to change meaning or word class. Many derive from Latin and Greek; for example, “-pterous” appears in biology to denote winged animals.
Below you’ll find the table with Origin, Meaning, and Example words.
Origin: Tells the language or period the suffix comes from, so you judge historical usage and register.
Meaning: Gives a short, practical gloss so you quickly see how the suffix alters a word’s sense or function.
Example words: Lists two to four real words showing common and specialized uses you can model or look up for more context.
Suffixes that start with P
| Suffix | Origin | Meaning | Example words | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| –proof | Old English | resistant to; incapable of being harmed by | waterproof, bulletproof, foolproof | Productive English suffix from native adjective “proof” meaning tested or resisting; common in informal and technical compounds. OED, corpora. |
| –phobia | Greek, Classical | intense fear or aversion to something | arachnophobia, xenophobia, agoraphobia | Very productive loan suffix denoting phobias; used in clinical and popular contexts. Can be used humorously. OED, medical sources. |
| –phobe | Greek, Classical | person who fears or dislikes something | homophobe, technophobe, xenophobe | Agentive form of -phobia; common in everyday and political language. Productive in coinages. OED, corpora. |
| –phobic | Greek, Classical | having an irrational fear or aversion | claustrophobic, homophobic, xenophobic | Adjectival form of -phobia; widely used in descriptive and clinical registers. Productive and frequent in newspapers and academia. |
| –phile | Greek, Classical | lover or enthusiast of something | bibliophile, Anglophile, technophile | Noun-forming suffix for a lover/fan; common in both serious and playful coinages. Widely attested in lexicons. |
| –philia | Greek, Classical | attraction or fondness; sometimes medical condition | hemophilia, francophilia, pedophilia | Noun denoting fondness/attraction or pathological condition; can be clinical or colloquial. Handle carefully due to medical senses. |
| –philic | Greek, Classical | preferring or attracted to; adjective | hydrophilic, thermophilic, anglophilic | Adjectival counterpart to -phile/-philia; productive in scientific and descriptive vocabulary (chemistry, biology). |
| –phone | Greek, Classical | sound-related instrument, or sound unit | telephone, saxophone, microphone | Very productive combining suffix for instruments and sound sources; common from 19th century onward. OED, technology history. |
| –phony | Greek/English | related to sound or false imitation | cacophony, homophony, phony [informal spelling] | As suffix denotes “sound” (from Greek) or forms English adjective/noun meaning fake (phon y/phony). Both senses are frequent. |
| –phage | Greek, Classical | eater; organism that consumes or destroys | bacteriophage, macrophage, phytophage | Biological/medical suffix for organisms that eat or destroy; scholarly and technical usage. OED, biology texts. |
| –phagy | Greek, Classical | act of eating; ingestion | coprophagy, geophagy, hematophagy | Noun-forming suffix for eating behaviors; common in biology and anthropology. Technical register. |
| –phagous | Greek, Classical | feeding on; eating (adjective) | herbivorous (alt. herbiphagous), zoophagous, saprophagous | Adjectival form describing dietary habit; used mainly in scientific taxonomy and ecology. [rare outside science] |
| –phyll | Greek, Classical | leaf or leaf-like part | chlorophyll, microphyll, sporophyll | Botanical combining form used as suffix in plant terms; scholarly but familiar in e.g., chlorophyll. OED, botanical literature. |
| –phyte | Greek, Classical | plant or plant-like organism | epiphyte, neophyte (figurative), bryophyte | Botanical/figurative noun suffix; also used metaphorically (neophyte = beginner). Productive in science and general English. |
| –phytic | Greek, Classical | relating to plants or growth | epiphytic, lithophytic, endophytic | Adjectival form used in botanical descriptions and ecology. Mostly technical. |
| –phore | Greek, Classical | bearer or carrier (often of something) | gametophore, sporophore, electrophore [rare] | Common in biological and technical terms meaning “carrier/bearer”; attested in specialist literature. Variant -phor/-phoros occurs. |
| –phoria | Greek, Classical | a state of bearing or sensation; emotional state | euphoria, dysphoria, anaphoria | Abstract-noun suffix for states or feelings; used in psychology and literature. Established vocabulary. |
| –pathy | Greek, Classical | disorder or feeling; disease or emotion | empathy, neuropathy, sociopathy | Very productive in medicine and psychology (disease, feeling); also used figuratively. Common and well-attested. |
| –pede | Latin, Classical | footed; having feet (combining form) | centipede, millipede, biped | Latin combining form from pes ‘foot’; productive in zoological and counting compounds. Common in everyday words. |
| –pedia | Greek, Classical | education, learning, body of knowledge | encyclopedia, Wikipedia, paediapulse [rare coinages] | From Greek paideia ‘education’; productive in forming names of knowledge-collections (encyclopedia, Wikipedia). Widely known and used. |
| –polis | Greek, Classical | city or city-state; urban center | Minneapolis, cosmopolis, Acropolis (as root) | Common in place names and literary coinages; productive historically in toponyms. [toponymic] |
| –plex | Latin, Classical | fold, interweaving, or complexity; units | duplex, triplex, complex | Combining element from Latin plectere-related roots; used in terms for multiple units or complex structures. Technical and general usage. |
| –plasia | Greek, Classical | formation, growth, development | hyperplasia, aplasia, dysplasia | Medical/biological suffix indicating formation or proliferation of tissue; widely used in pathology. Clinical register. |
| –plasty | Greek, Classical | surgical repair or molding | rhinoplasty, angioplasty, mastoplasty | Surgical suffix denoting repair or reshaping; very productive in medicine and cosmetic contexts. Common in news and clinical literature. |
| –plastic | Greek/Latin | relating to molding or formation; material | bioplastic, thermoplastic, neuroplastic | Adjectival/noun-forming suffix from Greek plastikos; used in science, materials, and figurative senses (neuroplasticity). |
| –pnea | Greek, Classical | breathing or respiration | apnea, dyspnea, orthopnea | Medical combining form for breathing conditions; common in clinical terminology. OED, medical texts. |
| –pod | Greek, Classical | foot or footed organism | arthropod, gastropod, cephalopod | Combining form denoting “foot” in zoology; heavily used in taxonomy and common compound names. Well-attested. |
| –poda | Greek, Classical | footed group (plural/collective) | Insecta: Diptera, Hymenoptera (taxa ending), Crustacea: Malacostraca (some names) | Taxonomic suffix denoting groups of organisms with particular “feet”; standard in biological classification. |
| –ptera | Greek, Classical | winged (plural form in taxonomy) | Lepidoptera, Diptera, Orthoptera | Standard taxonomic suffix for insect orders meaning “wings”; technical and widely used in entomology. |
| –pterous | Greek, Classical | winged; having wings (adjective) | lepidopterous, pterodactyl? (stem forms vary), digitopterous [rare] | Adjectival form from -ptera; used chiefly in zoological/morphological descriptions. Technical register. |
| –pexy | Greek, Medieval | surgical fixation; anchoring | gastropexy, nephropexy, hysteropexy | Medical suffix for fixation procedures; found in surgical terminology and clinical literature. OED, medical journals. |
| –plegia | Greek, Classical | paralysis or stroke-like condition | paraplegia, hemiplegia, quadriplegia | Clinical suffix for types of paralysis; common in medical and everyday usage. Well-attested. |
| –plegic | Greek, Classical | relating to paralysis; paralyzed | paraplegic, hemiplegic, tetraplegic | Adjectival form used in clinical descriptions and common speech. Widely used. |
| –parous | Latin, Classical | bearing or producing (offspring) | multiparous, primiparous, viviparous [var. -parous] | Biological/obstetric suffix denoting reproductive bearing; used in scientific and medical contexts. [specialized] |
| –praxy | Greek, Classical | practice or practical application | orthopraxy, idiosyncraticpraxy [rare coinages], heteropraxy [rare] | Noun-forming suffix from praxis meaning practice; used in religious, philosophical, and sociological contexts. [specialized] |
| –phyllous | Greek, Classical | having leaves or leaf-like structures | microphyllous, macrophyllous, monophyllous | Adjectival botanical suffix describing leaf characteristics; mainly technical in botany and morphology. |