-ful

English dictionary entry

Meanings

suffix
  1. Used to form adjectives from nouns, with the sense of being full of, tending to, or thoroughly possessing the quality expressed by the noun.
suffix
  1. Used to form nouns from nouns meaning “as much as can be held by what is denoted by the noun”

Pronunciation

/fʊl/ /fəl/ [fl̩] LL-Q1860 (eng)-Flame, not lame--ful.wav

Word forms

-ful more -ful most -ful -full ⠰⠇ -fuls -sful

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *pleh₁- Proto-Indo-European *-nós Proto-Indo-European *pl̥h₁nós Proto-Germanic *fullaz Proto-Germanic *-fullaz Old English -ful Middle English -ful English -ful Inherited from Middle English -ful, -full, from Old English -ful, -full (“full of; -ful”), from Proto-Germanic *-fullaz (“-ful”), from Proto-Germanic *fullaz (“full”); see full. Cognate with Scots -fu, Saterland Frisian -ful (“-ful”), West Frisian -fol (“-ful”), Dutch -vol (“-ful”), German -voll (“-ful”), Swedish -full (“-ful”), Danish -fuld (“-ful”), Icelandic -fullur, -fyllur (“-ful”).

Synonyms

Antonyms

Related words

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