Here you’ll find 24 Suffixes that start with C that begin with C, organized from “-centric” to “-cytic”. Many originate in Latin or Greek, and you see them in scientific, descriptive, medical, and everyday vocabulary.
Suffixes that start with C are bound endings added to stems to form adjectives, nouns, or verbs. A notable example is “-centric,” widely used in science and social commentary, as in “egocentric” and “ethnocentric.”
Below you’ll find the table with origin, meaning, and example words.
Origin: Shows the language or period the suffix comes from, helping you understand its historical roots and usage.
Meaning: Gives a short, clear definition so you can grasp how the suffix changes a word’s sense.
Example words: Lists two to four real words so you see the suffix in common contexts and register.
Suffixes that start with C
Suffix
Origin
Meaning
Example words
–cy
Old French/Latin
state or quality
privacy, urgency, truancy
–cide
Latin
killer; act of killing
homicide, pesticide, genocide
–cidal
Latin
killing; destructive to
bactericidal, pesticidal, virucidal
–cracy
Greek
rule; form of government
democracy, bureaucracy, plutocracy
–crat
Greek
member of a ruling group; supporter
bureaucrat, technocrat, plutocrat
–cratic
Greek
relating to governance or power
bureaucratic, democratic, theocratic
–cian
Latin/Old French
specialist; practitioner
musician, electrician, physician
–cule
Latin
small; diminutive
molecule, minuscule, ridicule
–culus
Latin
small; diminutive (Latinized)
homunculus, funiculus
–cyte
Greek
cell (biological)
leukocyte, hepatocyte, osteocyte
–cytic
Greek
relating to cells
erythrocytic, leukocytic
–cycle
Greek
wheel; recurring series
bicycle, motorcycle, tricycle
–centric
Greek
centered on; focused
egocentric, geocentric, anthropocentric
–crine
Greek
secreting; secretion-related
endocrine, exocrine, autocrine
–cyst
Greek
sac or bladder; pouch
blastocyst, sarcocyst, oocyst
–clast
Greek
breaker; fragment or breaker
iconoclast, pyroclast
–clastic
Greek
relating to breaking or fragments
iconoclastic, pyroclastic, autoclastic
–clasm
Greek
act of breaking or destruction
iconoclasm, osteoclasm
–cular
Latin
pertaining to; adjectival
molecular, ocular, vascular
–cial
Latin
pertaining to; adjectival
social, official, crucial
–cious
Latin
full of; having the quality of
delicious, precious, spacious
–coel
Greek
hollow; cavity
acoel, coelomate, coelenterate
–cole
Latin
dweller; living in/on
arenicole, saxicole, terricole
–chromatic
Greek
relating to color
polychromatic, achromatic, trichromatic
Descriptions
–cy
A very common noun-forming suffix (from Latin -cia) that creates abstract nouns like “policy” and “privacy.” Widely productive in modern English.
–cide
Productive combining form forming nouns for types of killing or killing agents; common in legal, medical and everyday vocabulary.
–cidal
Adjectival derivative of -cide used to describe agents or actions that kill or destroy organisms or things.
–cracy
Forms nouns denoting systems of rule or governance; frequently used in political and social terminology.
–crat
Agentive suffix naming people associated with a type of rule or ideology; common in political and organizational contexts.
–cratic
Adjectival form of -cracy, used to describe systems, attitudes, or structures of governance or rule.
–cian
Very common agentive/professional suffix indicating someone’s occupation or expertise.
–cule
Diminutive suffix from Latin; appears in scientific terms and everyday words to indicate smallness or a diminutive sense.
–culus
A Latin diminutive often retained in learned or anatomical terms; less productive but still attested in English.
–cyte
Highly productive scientific suffix naming cell types; ubiquitous in biology and medicine.
–cytic
Adjectival form of -cyte used in medical and biological descriptions referring to cells.
–cycle
Combining form meaning “wheel” or “series,” used in both everyday and technical compounds.
–centric
Adjectival combining form indicating focus or orientation toward a center or principle.
–crine
Medical/scientific combining form about glands, secretion, or signaling; common in physiology and endocrinology.
–cyst
Biological combining form for sac-like structures or cysts; widely used in pathology and developmental biology.
–clast
Suffix denoting a breaker or fragment; appears in scientific and cultural terms (e.g., iconoclast).
–clastic
Adjectival suffix meaning “breaking” or “broken into fragments,” common in geology and criticism jargon.
–clasm
Noun-forming suffix referring to the act or phenomenon of breaking or destroying; used in specialized and cultural contexts.
–cular
Adjectival suffix often forming descriptive words; variant of Latin adjectival endings, common in scientific and general English.
–cial
A common adjectival ending (from Latin -cialis) used to make adjectives from nouns or stems.
–cious
Productive adjectival suffix analogous to -tious/-acious; forms many common adjectives.
–coel
Combining form in biological terms for hollow or cavity-related structures; chiefly scientific and technical in use.
–cole
Technical biological/ ecological combining form meaning “inhabitant of” a substrate; mainly used in specialist literature.
–chromatic
Combining adjectival suffix about color or color properties; common in scientific and artistic vocabulary.
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