suffixes
Suffixes are morphemes attached to the end of a word or its base to modify its meaning or grammatical function. They are a type of affix, contrasted with prefixes that attach to the beginning and infixes that insert inside a word. In many languages, suffixes can signal tense, number, case, mood, or person, as well as derive new words or change their part of speech.
English inflectional suffixes include -s for plural (cats), -ed for past tense (walked), -ing for present participle
Some languages rely heavily on suffixation; German uses -en, -e, -er to form nouns and verbs; Turkish
Suffix placement allows stacking and complex word formation, but suffix order can be fixed; misplacement can
In computing, a suffix may refer to a file extension, the letters after a period that indicate
Historically, suffixes are among the oldest morphological tools and recur across languages, often deriving from older