ad-

Etymology
Borrowed from. .

Prefix

 * 1)   Doing, enacting, forming a verb.
 * 2)  Near, close to, adjacent.
 * 3)  Towards in direction or movement.  Towards the midline of the body.
 * 4)   Intensifying, additionally.
 * 5)  Along, alongside.
 * 6)  Appending and/or prepending. Adding from either side.
 * 7)  Modifying.
 * 8)  Atop or above in position.
 * 1)  Along, alongside.
 * 2)  Appending and/or prepending. Adding from either side.
 * 3)  Modifying.
 * 4)  Atop or above in position.
 * 1)  Modifying.
 * 2)  Atop or above in position.
 * 1)  Atop or above in position.

Derived terms
















Translations

 * Portuguese: ,

Etymology
Prefix form of. Also based on.

Prefix

 * 1) to (indicating that to which there is movement, tendency or position, with or without arrival)

Alternative forms
For euphony, ad- can assimilate the attached stem's initial consonant, becoming: (before sc, sp, st, and sometimes gn), (before c and q),  (before f),, , , , , or.

Etymology
From the Latin preposition, in turn from , from.

Prefix

 * 1) to
 * 2) usually prefixed to verbs, in which cases it often has the effect of intensifying the verbal action

Prefix

 * 1) your (singular)

Etymology
From, from. Cognates include 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬.

Prefix

 * 1) to, towards
 * (forms of )
 * (forms of )
 * (past subjunctive prototonic forms of )
 * (forms of )
 * (subjunctive forms of )
 * (forms of )
 * (subjunctive forms of )

Usage notes

 * , when used as an augment affix, vanishes in prototonic forms due to syncope. However, its presence may be detected via the different syncope patterns between forms augmented with and those that were not.
 * In deuterotonic verbs where ad- is the first prefix and the next sound is /t/, the d in the prefix may be dropped in its spelling.

Prefix

 * 1)  near; at

Etymology
From, from. from. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Prefix

 * 1) again, back, re-