ad-

See also: Appendix:Variations of "ad"

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin ad-. Doublet of at-.

Prefix

ad-

  1. (no longer productive) Doing, enacting, forming a verb.
    accouple, admarginate, admixture, attune
  2. Near, close to, adjacent.
    adaxonal, addental, admedial
  3. Towards in direction or movement. (anatomy) Towards the midline of the body.
    adapical, adfluvial, adgerminal
  4. (no longer productive) Intensifying, additionally.
    acclaim, adsignification, adspection
  5. Along, alongside.
    admarginal, adnervular, adstratum
  6. Appending and/or prepending. Adding from either side.
    adfix, adposition, affix
  7. Modifying.
    adnominal, adverb, assoil
  8. Atop or above in position.
    adatom, adcumulate, aggrade

Derived terms

English terms prefixed with ad-

Translations

References

Anagrams

Catalan

Prefix

ad-

  1. ad-

Ido

Etymology

Prefix form of ad. Also based on Latin ad-.

Prefix

ad-

  1. to (indicating that to which there is movement, tendency or position, with or without arrival)
    portar (carry, bear)adportar (bring, carry (to a person or place))
    ube (where)adube (where to (with motion), whither)

Derived terms

Ido terms prefixed with ad-

Latin

Alternative forms

For euphony, ad- can assimilate the attached stem's initial consonant, becoming: a- (before sc, sp, st, and sometimes gn), ac- (before c and q), af- (before f), ag-, al-, ap-, ar-, as-, or at-.

Etymology

From the Latin preposition ad (to, towards), in turn from Proto-Italic *ad, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éd (near, at).

Prefix

ad-

  1. to
  2. usually prefixed to verbs, in which cases it often has the effect of intensifying the verbal action

See also

Latin terms prefixed with ad-

Lushootseed

Prefix

ad-

  1. your (singular)

Old Irish

Etymology

From Proto-Celtic *ad-, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éd (near, at). Cognates include Latin ad and English at.

Prefix

ad-

  1. to, towards
  2. in many compounds, it has a purely intensive sense
  3. augment infix used instead of ro- on verbs whose first prefix is com- and the stressed syllable starts with a consonant
    con·birt (you conceived) + ad-con·abairt (you have conceived) (forms of con·beir)
    con·melt ((s)he rubbed) + ad-con·amailt ((s)he had rubbed) (forms of con·meil)
    ·coscrad (not destroyed) + ad-·comscarad (had not destroyed) (past subjunctive prototonic forms of con·scara)
    con·gab (it contained) + ad-con·acab (it had contained) (forms of con·gaib)
    *·cotla + ad-·comthala (subjunctive forms of con·tuili (to sleep))

Usage notes

  • ad-, when used as an augment affix, vanishes in prototonic forms due to syncope. However, its presence may be detected via the different syncope patterns between forms augmented with ad- and those that were not.
  • In deuterotonic verbs where ad- is the first prefix and the next sound is /t/, the d in the prefix may be dropped in its spelling.

Derived terms

Old Irish terms prefixed with ad-

Descendants

  • Irish: a- (no longer productive)

Mutation

Old Irish mutation
RadicalLenitionNasalization
ad- unchanged n-ad-
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

References

Portuguese

Alternative forms

Prefix

ad-

  1. ad- (near; at)

Welsh

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Brythonic *ate-, from Proto-Celtic *ati-.[1] from Proto-Indo-European *éti.[2] Cognate with Cornish as-, English ed-, Latin et (and), Sanskrit अति (ati, over-).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ad/

Prefix

ad-

  1. again, back, re-
    Synonym: ail-
    ad- + llais (voice)adlais (echo)
    ad- + talu (to pay)ad-dalu (to refund)
    ad- + blas (taste)adflas (aftertaste)
  2. affirmative prefix, emphasises prefixed word
    ad- + cas (hated, nasty)atgas (hateful, detestable)

Derived terms

Welsh terms prefixed with ad-

Mutation

Welsh mutation
radical soft nasal h-prothesis
ad- unchanged unchanged had-
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

References

  1. Morris Jones, John (1913) A Welsh Grammar, Historical and Comparative, Oxford: Clarendon Press, § 156 i (1)
  2. Morris Jones, John (1913) A Welsh Grammar, Historical and Comparative, Oxford: Clarendon Press, § 222 i (3)

Ye'kwana

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [aɾ̠-]

Prefix

ad-

  1. (Cunucunuma River dialect) Allomorph of ö- (second-person prefix) used for stems that begin with a vowel a or e.

Inflection

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