Grammar Tips & Articles »

Prefix Words

This Grammar.com article is about Prefix Words — enjoy your reading!


46 sec read
3,588 Views
  Ed Good  —  Grammar Tips
Font size:

Introduction

Many words start with prefixes; e.g., nonresident, antitrust, coparty, and a spate of others. As a writer, you must learn the rules of hyphenation. So let's start with this observation:

Nearly all words formed with prefixes are not hyphenated.

Yet many writers will spell some prefix words one way and virtually identical words another way: non-resident and nonobvious or pretrial and pre-verdict.

In law, older versions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were hopelessly confused. The heading to old rule 21, for example, contained two prefix words, each treated differently:

"Misjoinder and Non-Joinder of Parties."

Rule 13(g) spoke of "co-party." Yet the Federal Rules correctly left out the hyphens in "Interpleader" and "Multidistrict Litigation."

Spell-Checkers

The spell-checkers of MS Word and WordPerfect don't have a clue about correct hyphenation, so they will "reject" many correctly spelled words.

 

Previous: Ranges of Numbers

Next: Prefix Words - Exceptions to the Rule

Rate this article:

Have a discussion about this article with the community:

0 Comments

    Citation

    Use the citation below to add this article to your bibliography:

    Style:MLAChicagoAPA

    "Prefix Words." Grammar.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. <https://www.grammar.com/prefix-words>.

    Free, no signup required:

    Add to Chrome

    Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

    Free, no signup required:

    Add to Firefox

    Check your text and writing for style, spelling and grammar problems everywhere on the web!

    Free Writing Tool:

    Instant
    Grammar Checker

    Improve your grammar, vocabulary, style, and writing — all for FREE!


    Quiz

    Are you a grammar master?

    »
    Which sentence is grammatically incorrect?
    A She and her sister are coming over.
    B Me and my friends are planning a trip.
    C Him and I will attend the meeting.
    D I have never been to Europe.

    Improve your writing now:

    Download Grammar eBooks

    It’s now more important than ever to develop a powerful writing style. After all, most communication takes place in reports, emails, and instant messages.