This list includes 22 Suffixes that start with S, from “-s” to “-sy”. These short, bound endings often mark plurals, adjectives, nouns, or verb forms and appear across formal and informal English. Use them when forming plurals, comparatives, agent nouns, or derivations in writing, teaching, and language study.

Suffixes that start with S are short, bound morphemes attached to stems to create new words or grammatical forms. Many come from Old English, Latin, or French, and suffixes like “-ship” show long-standing use in English.

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

Origin: It shows the language or historical period the suffix comes from, helping you judge usage and tone.

Meaning: This gives a short, clear definition of the suffix’s contribution to word meaning or grammatical role.

Example words: Example words show two to four real words that use the suffix so you can see it in context.

Suffixes that start with S

Suffix Origin (language/period) Meaning Example words Description
s Old English plural and 3rd-person singular verb ending cats, runs, dogs Extremely productive English inflectional suffix for plurals and 3rd-person verbs; ubiquitous in modern usage.
st Old English (archaic) 2nd person singular verb ending (thou) lovest, goest, hast Archaic second-person singular verb ending; largely obsolete except in poetry, historical drama, and some dialectal survivals.
ship Old English state, condition, office, skill friendship, leadership, authorship Very common derivational suffix forming abstract nouns of status, quality, office, or relationship; highly productive.
sion Latin/Old French act, state, result (noun-forming) tension, expansion, decision Learned noun-forming suffix from Latin; orthographic variant of -tion in many words; widely attested and derivational.
sis Greek process, state, medical/technical noun analysis, crisis, paralysis Classical Greek suffix common in science and medicine; moderately productive for technical coinages; derivational.
sive Latin adjectival: inclined to, relating to passive, extensive, cohesive Adjectival suffix from Latin -ivus via French; very common in learned vocabulary; derivational.
some Old English characterized by, causing (adjectival) handsome, quarrelsome, burdensome Productive adjectival suffix from Old English -sum; common in everyday and literary vocabulary; derivational.
son Old English/Old Norse son of; patronymic element Johnson, Anderson, Davidson Common in surnames as a patronymic; historically productive in names, less so for new common nouns.
ster Old English agent, inhabitant, role (originally agentive) spinster, gangster, youngster Originally agentive; now often colloquial or pejorative; still visible in historical and playful coinages.
scope Greek instrument for viewing or field of study microscope, periscope, horoscope Combining form from Greek skopos; productive in technical and scientific compounds; derivational.
scopy Greek act of viewing with an instrument endoscopy, colonoscopy, microscopy Medical/technical noun-forming suffix; highly productive in clinical and scientific vocabulary.
saurus Greek/Latin (taxonomy) lizard; dinosaur genus ending Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, Brachiosaurus Taxonomic suffix from Greek sauros; standard in dinosaur and reptile genus names; specialized derivational use.
side Old English location beside; area related to bedside, riverside, seaside Locative suffix forming nouns indicating position or area; productive in compounds and place names.
scape Middle English view, scene, or conceptual domain landscape, dreamscape, cityscape Noun-forming element denoting a scene, setting, or domain; popular for creative coinages and metaphors.
shire Old English county, region, administrative area Yorkshire, Hampshire, Wiltshire Place-name suffix denoting a shire; common in British toponyms and regional names.
self Old English reflexive or emphatic pronoun element himself, herself, itself Bound morpheme forming reflexive/emphatic pronouns; essential in modern English pronoun morphology.
scent Latin becoming, beginning to be (adjectival) iridescent, quiescent, fluorescent From Latin -scens/-scent; forms adjectives meaning “becoming” or “in a state of”; common in learned vocabulary.
sophy Greek wisdom, body of knowledge or doctrine philosophy, theosophy, anthroposophy Learned noun-forming suffix denoting systems of thought or knowledge; used in academic and spiritual terms.
stasis Greek standing still, stable state (medical/scientific) homeostasis, metastasis, cytostasis Common in medical and scientific terms for stability or pathological states; specialized derivational suffix.
stomy Greek surgical opening, creating an opening colostomy, tracheostomy, gastrostomy Medical surgical suffix forming names of operations that create openings; productive in clinical terminology.
sclerosis Greek hardening (medical pathological suffix) arteriosclerosis, osteosclerosis, atherosclerosis Medical combining form meaning “hardening”; used in disease names; specialized and technical.
sy Modern English (colloquial) informal diminutive or adjectival ending Aussie, doggy, tipsy Colloquial/informal adjectival or diminutive ending in casual speech and nicknames; variable productivity and spelling.

Descriptions

s
st
ship
sion
sis
sive
some
son
ster
scope
scopy
saurus
side
scape
shire
self
scent
sophy
stasis
stomy
sclerosis
sy
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