Prefixes and Suffixes

The people behind the system will use the deception and trickery of words to pull you into a legal jurisdiction that they control.
This is done when naive people just assume the meaning behind the word, rather than understanding the origin of it, and therefore not spotting the true meaning.
You must learn to read. This means look for a change in syntax, a change in font or case, detect the difference between symbolic language and one you read, and find the origin behind words and their legal meaning.
One trick used to perpetrate this deception is by the use of prefixes and suffixes.

Affix

The word “affix” means to “attach” or “fasten”, and when applied to words it means “an addition” to an existing word in order to modify its meaning or create a new word.

Prefix

Pre means “former” or “before”, therefore prefix means an addition placed before another word in order to change its meaning.

Suffix

Suf comes from the Latin preposition sub, which is a word-forming element meaning, “under”, “beneath”, “behind”, “resulting from further division”.
Such as:
  • Submarine
  • Subject
  • Subdivision
  • Subframe
A suffix added at the end of a word forms a derivative called a morpheme, which usually changes the origin word to now describe an action, or carrying out the action of.
Morpheme meaning: a unit of a language that cannot be further divided.
There are 82 prefixes and suffixes within the English language, with over 170,000 words. Here are just a few examples.

Con

The prefix “con” means “with” or “joint” or “together”, although “con” comes from the Latin word contra meaning “against” or “opposite”.
This can be confusing so you would need to understand the word in context in order to correctly interpret the meaning.
Such as:
  • Confession – Con “against”, fess “to speak”, ion “action of”.
  • Constitution – Con “together”, stitut Latin for “set up, decided”, ion “process”.
  • Consent – Con “together”, sent “feel”.
  • Convey – Con “together”, vey “way” or to “transfer” or “pass on”.
Grammar lessons now? Are they necessary for facing the court! 😎👍
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121 sats \ 2 replies \ @Lux 1 Jul
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33 sats \ 1 reply \ @Hamstr 1 Jul
I think I'm missing the context here. The spelling from the judge got dismissed? Where did she mess up?
is it because he stated who he was before he entered the floodgates?
As a literacy coach who teaches students how to identify affixes and decode the meaning of unfamiliar words, I devoured this! Thanks
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🧡Most excellent posts! 🧡
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They say: "You are breaking the law! Do you under-stand me?"
And the scared shitizen, just giving a clueless answer: "Yes" 😂😂😂😂😂😂
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