This list includes 16 Suffixes that start with D, from “-dactyl” to “-dynia”. Many are classical or specialized morphemes, common in scientific, medical and descriptive vocabulary.

Suffixes that start with D are word endings that form nouns, adjectives, or conditions. Several come from Greek or Latin; for example, “-dactyl” appears in zoological names like “pterodactyl”.

Below you’ll find the table with Origin, Meaning and Example words.

Origin: Shows the historical language or period the suffix comes from, helping you judge formality and technical use.

Meaning: Gives a short, practical gloss so you quickly grasp how the suffix changes a base word’s meaning.

Example words: Lists two to four real words that illustrate typical uses so you can see the suffix in context.

Suffixes that start with D

SuffixOriginMeaningExample Words
domOld Englishstate, realm, condition, collectivekingdom, freedom, boredom, dukedom
dromeGreek via Latin/Frenchracecourse, running-place; type of venueaerodrome, velodrome, hippodrome
ductLatinlead, bring; channel or conduitaqueduct, viaduct, adduct
dactylGreekfinger or toe; relating to digitspterodactyl, polydactyl, hexadactyl
dactylyGreekcondition of digits; digit number/abnormalitypolydactyly, brachydactyly
dermGreekskin, outer layerhypodermic, ectoderm, pachyderm
demicGreekof a people; (epidemiology) relating to disease spreadpandemic, endemic, epidemic
doxGreekopinion, belief, doctrineorthodox, heterodox, paradox
doxyGreekdoctrine or system of belieforthodoxy, heterodoxy
dyniaGreekpainpleurodynia, gastrodynia, cardiodynia
dyneGreekforce, power (technical)heterodyne, homodyne, aerodyne
dromousGreekmigratory, running (movement pattern)anadromous, catadromous, amphidromous
dramaGreekplay, spectacle; dramatic formmelodrama, psychodrama, sociodrama
dorLatin/Spanishagent suffix “one who” (from Romance loans)matador, conquistador, sudador
dromicGreekpertaining to running or preceding; adjectivalprodromic, anadromic, catadromic
dactylousGreekhaving fingers/toes; adjectival of digitspolydactylous, brachydactylous

Descriptions

dom
Very common noun-forming suffix denoting realms, conditions, or collectives; highly productive in everyday English.
drome
Combining form for places or courses (esp. 19th–20th-century coinages); used in place names and technical terms; limited modern productivity.
duct
Combining form in engineering/biology for conduits or leading; fairly common in learned compounds; limited native productivity.
dactyl
Used in zoological and anatomical names; productive in technical coinages describing digit counts or shapes.
dactyly
Medical/clinical suffix forming condition nouns; specialist usage rather than everyday vocabulary.
derm
Highly productive in medical and biological terms; common combining form for skin-related concepts.
demic
Common in public-health and social vocabulary; productive in modern coinages (e.g., infodemic).
dox
Combining form about belief or opinion; familiar in ideological and descriptive words; moderately productive.
doxy
Forms nouns denoting doctrines or belief systems; somewhat specialized but widely recognized.
dynia
Medical suffix meaning pain or painful condition; relatively rare and specialist.
dyne
Technical combining form in physics/engineering and occasional coinages; specialist vocabulary with limited general use.
dromous
Biological term for migration patterns; technical and used mainly in zoology/ecology.
drama
Combining form forming genres or investigative techniques; common in cultural and clinical contexts.
dor
Found in many Spanish/Latin loanwords as an agentive ending; not productive in native English (chiefly non-English).
dromic
Adjectival form used in medicine and biology (e.g., prodromal concepts); specialized and limited.
dactylous
Adjectival variant used in zoology and anatomy; technical usage, not common in everyday speech.
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