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  1. 3rd Grade Reading
  2. Decode Words with Common Latin Suffixes

-tion-able-ment-ible-ous
3RD GRADE ELA β€’ READING FOUNDATIONAL SKILLS

Decode Words with Common Latin Suffixes

Learn how tiny word endings from an old language can help you read and understand big, new words!

Section 1

Where Do Latin Suffixes Come From?

A very long time ago, people in a place called Rome spoke a language called Latin. Latin was used for over a thousand years! When the Romans traveled to new lands, they shared their language. Over time, many Latin words mixed into English. Today, more than half of all English words have Latin parts in them. That is a lot of words!

One of the coolest parts of Latin that snuck into English is the suffix. A suffix is a small group of letters stuck onto the end of a word. It changes what the word means or how you use it. Let's look at how this happened over time.

Over 2,000 Years Ago
The Romans speak Latin every day. They add endings like -tiō and -mentum to their words to change their meanings.
About 1,000 Years Ago
People in England start mixing Latin and French words into English. Many Latin suffixes, like -tion and -ment, become part of English.
About 500 Years Ago
Books are printed for the first time in England. Writers use lots of Latin-based words, and those suffixes spread to even more readers.
Today
You use Latin suffixes every single day! Words like "action," "enjoyable," and "movement" all have Latin endings.

So here's the big question: If you learn just a few of these Latin suffixes, can they help you read words you've never seen before? The answer is yes! Let's find out how.

Section 2

What Is a Suffix?

Before we learn specific Latin suffixes, let's make sure we know some important words. A base word (sometimes called a root word) is the main part of a word that carries the biggest meaning. A suffix is a letter or group of letters added to the end of a base word. It changes the word's meaning or the way you use it in a sentence.

For example, the base word "enjoy" is something you already know. When you add the suffix -able to the end, you get "enjoyable," which means "able to be enjoyed." The suffix gave the word a new twist!

1

Base Word

The main part of a word. It holds the core meaning. Example: play, act, move.
2

Suffix

A small ending added after the base word. It changes the meaning. Example: -tion, -ment, -able.
3

Latin Suffix

A suffix that originally came from the Latin language. English borrowed many of them! Example: -ible, -ous, -ive.
4

Decoding

Breaking a word into parts so you can figure out how to read it and what it means. You "decode" words like a detective!
✦ Key Takeaway
Think of a suffix like a costume for a word. The word "act" is like a person. When you put the costume -tion on it, it transforms into "action" β€” a whole new look and a new job in the sentence! The person is still inside, but now they look different.
Section 3

See It in a Picture

Let's look at how a base word and a suffix fit together, like puzzle pieces. In the diagram below, you can see three words being built. The base word is on the left, the suffix is on the right, and the new word appears when they snap together!

WORD BUILDING WITH LATIN SUFFIXESenjoyBASE WORD+-ableSUFFIX=enjoyable"can be enjoyed"actBASE WORD+-tionSUFFIX=action"the act of doing"moveBASE WORD+-mentSUFFIX=movement"the result of moving"Each suffix changes the word's job and meaning!🧩 Base Word + Suffix = A Brand-New Word!

See how the base word and the suffix snap together? The base word gives the main meaning. The suffix gives the word a new job. When you see a long word, look for these pieces. If you spot a suffix you know, you're already halfway to understanding the whole word!

Section 4

How to Decode a Word with a Latin Suffix

Decoding means breaking a word into smaller parts so you can read it and understand it. Here is a simple plan you can follow every time you see a big word.

THE DECODING PLAN
1. Find the suffix β†’ 2. Cover it up β†’ 3. Read the base β†’ 4. Put it together β†’ 5. Think about meaning
Follow these five steps whenever you meet a tricky word!

Step 1: Find the suffix. Look at the end of the word. Do you see a common Latin suffix like -tion, -ment, -able, -ible, or -ous? If yes, you found it!

Step 2: Cover it up. Use your finger or a piece of paper to cover the suffix. Now you can see just the base word by itself.

Step 3: Read the base word. Sound out the base word. This is the part you might already know, like "enjoy," "act," or "move."

Step 4: Put it together. Now say the base word and the suffix together smoothly. "Enjoy" + "able" = "enjoyable."

Step 5: Think about the meaning. The suffix gives you a clue! If -able means "can be," then "enjoyable" means "can be enjoyed." You decoded it!

DECODING FLOWCHARTSTEP 1Look at the end. Find the suffix!πŸ”STEP 2Cover up the suffix with your finger.πŸ‘†STEP 3Read the base word by itself.πŸ“–STEP 4Say the base + suffix together.πŸ—£οΈSTEP 5Think: what does the suffix mean?πŸ’‘πŸŽ‰ You decoded the word!
✦ Key Takeaway
Decoding a word with a Latin suffix is like opening a present. First you unwrap the paper (the suffix). Then you see what's inside (the base word). Now you know both parts, and you understand the whole gift!
Section 5

Your Latin Suffix Guide

Here are six common Latin suffixes you will see again and again when you read. Learn what each one means, and you'll be able to figure out tons of new words!

SuffixWhat It MeansExample WordWord Meaning
-tion / -sionthe act of; the state ofact β†’ actionthe act of doing something
-ablecan be; able to beenjoy β†’ enjoyablecan be enjoyed
-iblecan be; able to beflex β†’ flexibleable to bend
-mentthe result of; the act ofmove β†’ movementthe result of moving
-ous / -iousfull of; havingfame β†’ famousfull of fame
-ivetending to; having the nature ofact β†’ activetending to act

Notice that -able and -ible mean the same thing! They're like twins. The tricky part is remembering which words use -able and which use -ible. The good news? As you read more books, you'll start to remember which one looks right.

Also notice that -tion and -sion are close cousins. Both mean "the act of" or "the state of." You say -tion like "shun" and -sion like "zhun" or "shun." Words like "vision" and "addition" use these suffixes.

✦ Key Takeaway
Think of each suffix as a secret code. If you know the code, you can unlock the meaning of any word wearing that suffix. Only six codes, but they open hundreds of words!
Section 6

Worked Example

Let's decode the word "comfortable" step by step. Imagine you are reading a sentence that says: "The couch was very comfortable."

Decoding "comfortable"

Step 1 β€” Find the Suffix

Look at the end of comfortable. Do you see a Latin suffix? Yes! The ending -able is right there. It means "can be."

Step 2 β€” Cover the Suffix

Cover up -able with your finger. What is left? You see comfort.

Step 3 β€” Read the Base Word

Sound out the base word: com Β· fort. "Comfort" means a feeling of being cozy and relaxed.

Step 4 β€” Put It Back Together

Now say it all together: comfort + able = comfortable. Nice work! You can read it.

Step 5 β€” Think About the Meaning

The suffix -able means "can be." So "comfortable" means "can be comforting" or "gives comfort." In the sentence, the couch gives a cozy, relaxed feeling. That makes sense!

See how easy that was? You just decoded a ten-letter word by breaking it into two pieces. You can use these same five steps with any word that has a Latin suffix!

Section 7

Suffixes Can Change a Word's Job

Here is something really cool. When you add a Latin suffix to a base word, the word often changes its job in a sentence. In English, we call these jobs parts of speech. A word might change from an action word (a verb) to a naming word (a noun) or a describing word (an adjective). Let's look at some examples!

Base Word (Job)+ SuffixNew Word (New Job)
act (verb – action word)-tionaction (noun – naming word)
act (verb)-iveactive (adjective – describing word)
enjoy (verb)-ableenjoyable (adjective)
enjoy (verb)-mentenjoyment (noun)
danger (noun)-ousdangerous (adjective)

The same base word "act" can become "action" (a noun) or "active" (an adjective) depending on which suffix you add. That's the power of suffixes! They are small, but they do a big job.

✦ Key Takeaway
Suffixes are like magic hats. Put a different hat on the same base word, and it gets a different job. The -tion hat turns a verb into a noun. The -ous hat turns a noun into an adjective. Same base word, different hat, different job!
Section 8

Level Up: Prefixes, Roots, and More!

Now that you know about suffixes, guess what? There are also prefixes! A prefix is a group of letters added to the beginning of a word. For example, un- means "not." So "un" + "comfortable" = "uncomfortable," which means "not comfortable."

Some words have all three parts: a prefix, a root, and a suffix! The word "invisible" is a great example. It has the prefix in- (meaning "not"), the root vis (meaning "see," from Latin), and the suffix -ible (meaning "can be"). So "invisible" means "not able to be seen." How awesome is that?

What You Know NowWhat You'll Learn Next
Latin suffixes at the end of wordsLatin prefixes at the beginning of words
Base words you can already readLatin and Greek roots that are hidden inside bigger words
Decoding one suffix at a timeDecoding words with a prefix and a suffix at the same time

Don't worry about learning all of that today. Just keep using your suffix skills, and before long, you'll be ready to tackle prefixes and roots, too. You're becoming a word detective!

Section 9

Practice Problems

Time to try it yourself! Read each question. When you are ready, click "Show Answer" to check your work. Good luck!

PROBLEM 1 β€” WHAT DO YOU REMEMBER?
What is a suffix? Where do you find it in a word?
PROBLEM 2 β€” FIND THE SUFFIX
Look at the word "invention." Can you find the Latin suffix? What is the base word?
PROBLEM 3 β€” WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
The word "joyous" has a Latin suffix. What is the suffix, and what does the whole word mean? Hint: Think about what -ous means.
PROBLEM 4 β€” USE IT IN REAL LIFE
Read this sentence: "The weather made the roads very treacherous." You may not know the word "treacherous." Use the suffix to help! What does the suffix tell you about the word? What kind of word is it β€” a naming word, an action word, or a describing word?
PROBLEM 5 β€” WORD BUILDER CHALLENGE
Start with the base word "collect." Can you add two different Latin suffixes from this lesson to make two different new words? Tell what each new word means.
Summary

What We Learned

A suffix is a small ending added to a word that changes its meaning or its job in a sentence. Many English suffixes came from the ancient Latin language. In this lesson, you learned six important Latin suffixes: -tion / -sion (the act of), -able (can be), -ible (can be), -ment (the result of), -ous / -ious (full of), and -ive (tending to). Each suffix works like a secret code that helps you unlock the meaning of new words.

To decode a word with a Latin suffix, follow five steps: find the suffix, cover it, read the base word, put the word back together, and think about the meaning. Suffixes can also change a word's job β€” turning a verb into a noun or an adjective. The more you practice spotting suffixes, the more new words you'll be able to read and understand all by yourself!

Varsity Tutors β€’ 3rd Grade English Language Arts β€’ Decode Words with Common Latin Suffixes