ill, illadvised, illadvisedly, illaffected, illassorted, illawarra, illbegotten, illbehaved, illbeing, illbeings, illboding, illbred, illbreeding, illchosen, illconceived, illconditioned, illconditionedness, illconsidered, illdefined, illdisguised, illdisposed, illdisposedness, illdressed, illequipped, illfamed, illfated, illfavoured, illfavoredly, illfavoredness, illfavoured, illfed, illfitted, illfitting, illformed, illformedness, illfounded, illgotten, illgottengains, illhealth, illhumor, illhumored, illhumoredly, illhumoredness, illhumoured, illinformed, illintentioned, illjudged, illkempt, illmannered, illmanneredly, illmanneredness, illminded, illnature, illnatured, illnaturedspiritualinvasion, illnaturedly, illnaturedness, illnurtured, illomened, illposed, illprepared, illproportioned, illramas, illrepute, illscented, illshapen,.illsmelling, illsorted, illspent, illstarred, illsuited, illtempered, illtemperedly, illtemperedness, illthewed, illtimed, illtimeda, illtreat, illtreated, illtreating, illtreatment, illtreats, illusage, illuse, illused, illuses, illusing, .illwill
Some words that have this prefix are: illiterate, illegitimate, illogical. These all mean not. (Not logical = illogical)
illegal is one word. i cant think of any more right now, let you know when i have some more.
inmate, intolarant, impossible, implantation, irrational, irrelevant, illegal, illuminate, illegitimate
"ill" is three letters...
impossible
Un: reverses the meaning of the base word, eg. "happy" becomes "unhappy" Re: indicates repetition or back, eg. "do" becomes "redo" Im: often signifies not or into, eg. "possible" becomes "impossible" In: denotes negation or lack, eg. "visible" becomes "invisible" Ir: negates words starting with 'r', eg. "regular" becomes "irregular" Il: negates adjectives starting with 'l', eg. "legal" becomes "illegal"
Theses prefixes, such as ig, il, im, in and ir, mean "not". Examples: ignoble - not noble illegal - not legal imperfect - not perfect inconsistent - not consistent irregular - not regular
The prefix 'im' means 'not'.Confusion arises from the assimilation of this old definition of im-, into the present English definition meaning not. Il-, im- and ir- are all presently defined as auxiliary prefixes of in-.il- is used for words beginning with L; illegal.im- is used for words beginning with B, P or M; imbalance, impenetrable and immortal.ir- is used for words beginning with R; irregular.
The prefix 'im' is used instead of 'in' before certain consonant letters to maintain pronunciation ease. When followed by 'm', 'b', or 'p', 'in' changes to 'im' for smoother pronunciation, such as in words like "impossible" or "important".
In the word biography, the suffix "graphy" means "to write." ... The prefixes im, il, and in, mean not. ... The Greek root word "derm" means what? ... In words like ...
The prefix 'im' means 'not'.Confusion arises from the assimilation of this old definition of im-, into the present English definition meaning not. Il-, im- and ir- are all presently defined as auxiliary prefixes of in-.il- is used for words beginning with L; illegal.im- is used for words beginning with B, P or M; imbalance, impenetrable and immortal.ir- is used for words beginning with R; irregular.
Some prefixes that start with "im-" include "impossible," "imperfect," and "immature." These prefixes typically indicate negation or reversal of the word following them.
impossible, impolite, impression, import, immaculate
The prefixes 'il-', 'im-', 'in-' and 'ir-' mean within, into, in, not and on
The prefix il-, as well as the similar prefixes im-, in-, and ir-, all mean "not", or "the opposite of".They have their roots in the Latin in- (which also means "not" or "the opposite of"), but the -n- was assimilated with the sound of the following consonant, to become words such asillegal: the opposite of legalinfamous: the opposite of famousimpossible: the opposite of impossibleirresponsible: the opposite of responsibleThese four prefixes share the same definition, and the same roots, and are worth mentioning together.
im