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prefiksene

Prefiksene are a class of morphemes that attach to the beginning of a base word to modify its meaning or grammatical function. In linguistics, a prefix is a bound morpheme that is prefixed to a word, forming a new word or altering its category. Prefixation is a common word-formation process in many languages. Prefixes differ from suffixes in their position and sometimes in their function; many prefixes are derivational, creating new words or changing word class, while others can serve inflectional purposes in certain languages.

The study of prefiksene covers their productivity, semantics, and historical development. Some prefixes are highly productive

Examples across languages illustrate their role in word formation. In English, prefixes such as un-, re-, and

and
attach
to
a
wide
range
of
bases,
while
others
are
restricted
to
specific
roots.
They
can
express
negation
(for
example,
un-,
in-
in
various
languages),
repetition
or
return
(re-),
or
spatial
and
temporal
relations
(pre-,
post-,
inter-).
The
combination
of
a
prefix
with
a
base
often
yields
a
word
whose
meaning
is
predictable
from
the
base
and
the
prefix,
though
historical
sound
changes
or
semantic
drift
can
produce
irregularities.
pre-
create
words
like
unhappy,
rewrite,
and
preheat.
In
Norwegian
and
other
Germanic
languages,
similar
processes
operate
with
prefixes
such
as
be-,
for-,
and
av-,
as
seen
in
verbs
like
forbinde
(to
connect)
and
beundre
(to
admire).
The
inventory
and
usage
of
prefiksene
vary
by
language
and
historical
period,
reflecting
different
morphological
systems
and
typological
tendencies.