Linguistics Girl

  • Linguistics
    • Grammatical Function
    • English Nouns
    • English Pronouns
    • English Determiners
    • English Adjectives
    • English Verbs
    • English Adverbs
    • English Prepositions
    • English P-words
    • English Conjunctions
    • English Interjections
  • Morphodex
    • About the Morphodex
    • Prefixes
    • Interfixes and Connecting Vowels
    • Suffixes
    • Morphodex Submission
    • Morphodex Error Report
    • Morphodex Sources
  • SWI
  • Punctuation
  • Curriculum
  • About Me
Search
Menu
Search

You are here:

  1. Home
  2. Morphodex
  3. P

P

Morpheme

P

Type

bound base

Denotation

foot

Etymology

Latin -pus; Ancient Greek poús

Evidence

nonpolypoid, polyp, polypian, polypoid, polypoidal, polyposis, polyps

Notes

polyp and polypus are doublets

See Also

Pus(e) [Puse, Pus], Pod(e) [Pode, Pod], Ped(e) [Pede, Ped], Pes, Pie, Foot, Feet

facebookShare on Facebook
TwitterTweet
PinterestSave

Trending Now

  • Black and white text reading "Linguistics Girl The Linguistic Librarian" on a hot pink background.

    Structured Word Inquiry of ‘Chandler’ and ‘Chandelier’

  • Black and white text reading "Linguistics Girl The Linguistic Librarian" on a hot pink background.

    One Wife, Two Wives: Allophonic Origins of Modern Plural Allomorphs

  • Black and white text reading "Linguistics Girl The Linguistic Librarian" on a hot pink background.

    Structured Word Inquiry of ‘Migration’

  • Privacy Policy
  • Donate
Back to Top
Close
  • Linguistics
    • Grammatical Function
    • English Nouns
    • English Pronouns
    • English Determiners
    • English Adjectives
    • English Verbs
    • English Adverbs
    • English Prepositions
    • English P-words
    • English Conjunctions
    • English Interjections
  • Morphodex
    • About the Morphodex
    • Prefixes
    • Interfixes and Connecting Vowels
    • Suffixes
    • Morphodex Submission
    • Morphodex Error Report
    • Morphodex Sources
  • SWI
  • Punctuation
  • Curriculum
  • About Me