| Kenneth G. Wilson (1923). The Columbia Guide to Standard American English. 1993. |
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| de-, dis-, dys- (prefixes) |
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| These three affixes have essentially negative meanings involving stopping, separating, contracting, and the like. Decontaminate means to take away or remove a contaminant; deduce means literally to lead away from; depend, literally to hang down; decipher, literally to reverse or undo; deplane, to get off a plane; denominate, literally to derive from a nominal. De- can also combine to mean completely, wholly, as in defunct. Dis- can combine to mean to stop (discontinue), to undo (disprove), to deprive of (disarm), an absence of (disagreement), not (disappear), and the like. Dys- in combination can mean bad (dysphoric), abnormal (dysgenic), nonfunctional (dysfunctional), impaired (dyslexic), and the like. | 1 |
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| | | The Columbia Guide to Standard American English. Copyright © 1993 Columbia University Press. |
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