suffixy
Suffixy is a term in linguistics used to describe the systematic use of suffixes to derive new words and to encode grammatical information. In this view, suffixes are not merely end-attached morphemes but productive operators that shape word formation and inflection.
Origin and usage: The term suffixy was coined in the late 20th century by linguists exploring the
Morphology and typology: Suffixy overlaps with derivational and inflectional morphology but focuses on the suffix's productivity
Productivity and phonology: Productivity varies; some suffixes are highly productive, others limited to fixed sets due
Examples: happy + -ness → happiness; act + -ive → active; teach + -er → teacher. In Turkish, ev- (house) + -ler (plural)
Implications: For computational linguistics and NLP, suffixy affects tokenization, stemming, and lemmatization; for language learning, suffixy
See also: suffix, morphology, derivation, inflection, agglutination.
References: This article synthesizes standard linguistic concepts and should be supplemented by sources on morphology and