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combining form
noun
, Grammar.
- a linguistic form that occurs only in combination with other forms. In word formation, a combining form may conjoin with an independent word ( mini- + skirt ), another combining form ( photo- + -graphy ), or an affix ( cephal- + -ic ); it is thus distinct from an affix, which can be added to either a free word or a combining form but not solely to another affix ( Iceland + -ic or cephal- + -ic but not pro- + -ic ). There are three types of combining forms: (1) forms borrowed from Greek or Latin that are derivatives of independent nouns, adjectives, or verbs in those languages; these combining forms, used in the formation of learned coinages, often semantically parallel independent words in English (cf., for example, cardio- in relation to heart, -phile in relation to lover ) and usually appear only in combination with other combining forms of Greek or Latin origin ( bibliophile, not bookphile ); (2) the compounding form of a free-standing English word; such a combining form usually has only a single, restricted sense of the free word, and may differ from the word phonetically. Compare -proof, -wide, -worthy, -land, -man; (3) a form extracted from an existing free word and used as a bound form, typically maintaining the meaning of the free word, or some facet of it. Compare heli- 2, mini-, para- 3, -aholic, -gate, -orama. Note that the term “combining form” does not specify placement before or after the element to which the form is attached.
combining form
noun
- a linguistic element that occurs only as part of a compound word, such as anthropo- in anthropology
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Word History and Origins
Origin of combining form1
First recorded in 1880–85
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Example Sentences
No matter what artistic discipline she’s working in, Mann is often inspired by the calculus of combining form and shape and sound.
From Washington Post
This bridge, however, stands as a work of art, Firth adds, combining form and function in one dazzling display.
From Scientific American
Franken-: Slang. a combining form used before something that is a hybrid of disparate parts, and meaning “strange or frightening.”
From Time
A terminal combining form: Having a stamen or stamens; staminate; as, monandrous, with one stamen; polyandrous, with many stamens.
From Project Gutenberg
A combining form, with the meaning of self, one's self, one's own, itself, its own.
From Project Gutenberg
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