com- - meaning and definition. What is com-
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What (who) is com- - definition

AFFIXES (I.E., BOUND MORPHEMES THAT PROVIDE LEXICAL MEANING) THAT ARE ADDED BEFORE EITHER SIMPLE ROOTS OR COMPLEX BASES (OR OPERANDS) CONSISTING OF (A) A ROOT AND OTHER AFFIXES, (B) MULTIPLE ROOTS, OR (C) MULTIPLE ROOTS AND OTHER AFFIXES
List of English prefixes; List of all English language prefixes; Com-; Prefix in English; Prefixes in English; English prefixes

Com-         
·- A prefix from the Latin preposition cum, signifying with, together, in conjunction, very, ·etc. It is used in the form com- before b, m, p, and sometimes f, and by assimilation becomes col- before l, cor- before r, and con- before any consonant except b, h, l, m, p, r, and w. Before a vowel com- becomes co-; also before h, w, and sometimes before other consonants.
com-         
(also co-, col-, con-, or cor-)
¦ prefix with; together; jointly; altogether: combine.
Origin
from L. cum 'with'.
.com         
FILE FORMAT
COM files; .com (file extension); .COM; DOS COM executable; PATHEXT; CP/M COM executable; COM file (CP/M); COM file (DOS); .COM file; .COM files; COM program; COM executable; .COM (file extension); COM file (SCP); COM file (MSX-DOS)
com

Wikipedia

English prefix

English prefixes are affixes (i.e., bound morphemes that provide lexical meaning) that are added before either simple roots or complex bases (or operands) consisting of (a) a root and other affixes, (b) multiple roots, or (c) multiple roots and other affixes. Examples of these follow:

  • undo (consisting of prefix un- and root do)
  • untouchable (consisting of prefix un-, root touch, and suffix -able)
  • non-childproof (consisting of prefix non-, root child, and suffix -proof)
  • non-childproofable (consisting of prefix non-, root child, root proof, and suffix -able)

English words may consist of multiple prefixes: anti-pseudo-classicism (containing both an anti- prefix and a pseudo- prefix).

In English, all prefixes are derivational. This contrasts with English suffixes, which may be either derivational or inflectional.

Examples of use of com-
1. Sources: www.historychannel. com; www.theholidayspot.com.
2. The ensuing dot com bubble predictably resulted in the dot com crash with hundreds of companies going to the wall.
3. In 2000, the BBC also blocked an attempt to auction off the internet names bbc1.com and bbc2.com.
4. Membership now stands at 20. www.universitas21.com
5. For more information, visit www.landscape2006.com.