Prefixes and suffixes are handy little tools. With just two or three letters, they modify a word and create a new one. And if you understand their meanings, you can usually decipher the new word without much trouble.
For example, the prefix dis- makes a word negative. When combined with the word appear it creates the word disappear, the opposite of appear. Easy enough.
But this being the English language, words without prefixes and suffixes aren’t always that recognizable (we like our language how we like our relationships: needlessly complex). What is the opposite of a gruntle? Have you ever felt chalant? Are you full of reck? Nope? You’ll only recognize these strange terms when paired with their affixes. Read on for a few of these tricky, one-of-a-kind words.