This collection presents 14 Suffixes that start with H, spanning from “-ham” to “-hydrate”. They include productive endings and older, borrowed forms used to make nouns, adjectives, and verbs.
Suffixes that start with H are bound morphemes that attach to roots to form new words or change word class. Many come from Old English or Latin, with familiar examples like “-hood” in “childhood”.
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 usage.
Meaning: Summarizes the basic semantic contribution of the suffix in a short phrase you can scan quickly.
Example words: Provide two to four real words showing how the suffix is used, so you can test fit and tone.
Suffixes that start with H
Suffix
Origin
Meaning
Status
–hood
Old English (hād)
state, condition; collective group
productive
–head
Old English (heafod)
person characterized by; top or front part
derivational
–house
Old English (hūs)
building or place associated with X
productive
–ham
Old English (hām)
homestead, village (place-name element)
restricted
–hurst
Old English (hyrst)
wooded hill, grove (place-name element)
restricted
–holm
Old Norse (holmr)
islet, small island; low-lying land
restricted
–haven
Old English (hæfen)
harbor, safe place (place-name element)
restricted
–hold
Old English/Germanic
place of holding; possession
derivational
–holic
20th-century English (back-formation from alcoholic)
addicted to; obsessive about
productive
–hedron
Greek via Latin/Neo-Latin
geometric solid, face-bearing shape
restricted
–hyde
Modern chemical nomenclature (19th c.)
compound containing an aldehyde group
restricted
–hydrate
Greek via Neo-Latin (hydor)
containing water (in compound)
restricted
–hawk
Old English (hafoc) used metaphorically
advocate/supporter of a policy
derivational
–hound
Old English (hund/hound)
one who pursues; dog-like
derivational
Descriptions
–hood
A common noun-forming suffix meaning state or group. Widely used across levels of speech. Examples: childhood, neighborhood, likelihood, knighthood.
–head
Used to make nouns indicating persons or the top/leading part. Many fixed compounds; limited new coinages. Examples: blockhead, figurehead, drumhead, beachhead.
–house
Combines with nouns to name buildings or institutional spaces. Very productive in compounds. Examples: farmhouse, boathouse, statehouse, playhouse.
–ham
A bound toponymic element preserved in English place names. Not productive for new words. Examples: Birmingham, Nottingham, Gillingham, Fulham.
–hurst
Toponymic suffix in English place names, especially southern England. Rarely forms modern words. Examples: Lyndhurst, Sandhurst, Hurstpierpoint.
–holm
Nordic-derived place-name element found in British and Scandinavian toponyms; not productive in general vocabulary. Examples: Stockholm, Holm (placename), Greenholm.
–haven
Used in coastal place names and some compounds meaning haven or refuge. Mostly toponymic. Examples: Whitehaven, Newhaven, Longhaven.
–hold
Found in compounds relating to possession or fortress-like places; somewhat restricted. Examples: stronghold, freehold, household.
–holic
Modern colloquial combining form (often variant -aholic) forming humorous/critical agent nouns. Examples: chocoholic, workaholic, shopaholic.
–hedron
Specialized technical suffix in geometry and taxonomy for polyhedra and face-counting names. Examples: tetrahedron, dodecahedron, polyhedron.
–hyde
Chemical naming suffix from “aldehyde”; used in common names for aldehydes. Examples: formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, paraldehyde.
–hydrate
Scientific combining form for compounds including water of crystallization; technical usage. Examples: monohydrate, dihydrate, calcium chloride dihydrate.
–hawk
Productive in political and journalistic coinages; often hyphenated or closed. Examples: warhawk, deficit-hawk, budget-hawk.
–hound
Found in animal names and agentive compounds; largely lexicalized but attested as combining element. Examples: foxhound, bloodhound, greyhound
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