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  • Is the suffix -ette used for referring to a female?
    The -ette suffix is normally applied to women, not objects designed specifically for women Thus suffragette, your dudette, usherette and the like The French language uses -ette to feminise names: Paul Paulette, Claude Claudette, etc , and the same principle is used to feminise some nouns in English to create a female variant By extension it can also mean "small", cigarette, novelette
  • Origin of snipe to mean partially-smoked cigar (ette)?
    2 Early dictionary coverage of 'snipe' in the sense of 'partially smoked cigar (ette)' James Maitland, The American Slang Dictionary (1891) has this relevant entry for snipe from an era before cigarettes were the nicotine vessel of choice in the United States: Snipe, the butt of a cigar
  • suffixes - Is there a Male suffix equivalent to -et -ette? - English . . .
    For a male counterpart to "damsel", see here: What is the male equivalent of “damsel”? There is no suffix that I know of In French, -et is a masculine suffix (as in the word "valet"); -ette is the corresponding feminine suffix
  • Whats the origin of the word geezer? - English Language Usage . . .
    "Geezer" actually means an odd or eccentric man This word came from guise, which was: (in Scotland and N England) the practice or custom of disguising oneself in fancy dress, often with a mask, and visiting people's houses, esp at Halloween The above is the origin of guiser Thus, it was used in slang to describe someone as odd, and it was pronounced "geezer" due to as you said, the Cockney
  • User Fabíola - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
  • Diminutive forms in English. - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Yes, in Old English there were suffixes that were commonly used to change nouns into diminutive nouns, similar to the French -et, -ette, and the Italian -etto, and -ino
  • Does one capitalize communism and communist?
    Suppose I have the following sentence: I lived in a communist country during the fall of communism in 1989 Should "communist" and "communism" be capitalized?
  • Is the word psithurism really used in English?
    The OED notes of psithurism, "Obsolete Forms: α psithurisma β psithurism This word belongs in Frequency Band 1 Band 1 contains extremely rare words unlikely ever to appear in modern text These may be obscure technical terms or terms restricted to occasional historical use, e g abaptiston, abaxile, grithbreach, gurhofite, zarnich, zeagonite * The only 4 examples are taken from dates
  • synonyms - Words for different levels of crying - English Language . . .
    Another question asks for the written sounds of different levels of crying (wah-wah, boo-hoo), but I was wondering if there are names for different levels of crying For instance, is there any way
  • terminology - Meaning and etymology of the “ite” and “ine ene” endings . . .
    The reason is in its etymology I got this from a mineralogy site: The suffix "ite" is derived from the Greek word lithos (from its adjectival form -ites), meaning rock or stone "ine" means : suffix of adjectives of Greek or Latin origin, meaning “of or pertaining to,” “of the nature of,” “made of,” So, minerals named that depends on the earlier part of the name Olivine would be





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