The root word, prefix and suffix of the word "hemoglobinopathy", respectively are:
- Haima
- Hemoglobino
- Pathy
<h3>What is the
Root, the
Prefix and the
Suffix of a word?</h3>
The root of a word is that fragment of the same from which it comes according to a previous language, in the case of English, the language from which it is derived is Latin. Thus, it is identified that the word "hemo" comes from the Latin word "haima" which translates blood.
On the other hand, prefixes are those words or syllables that are used at the beginning of a compound word to give it a certain meaning or modify its translation, in this case the prefix is "hemoglobin" which refers to something that alludes to blood.
Finally, suffixes are syllables that are added to the end of a word to change its direction, in this case the suffix is "pathy" which refers to some kind of disease.
More information about Grammar: brainly.com/question/1952321
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Hi, thanks for the points.
1. German is easy to acquire
German is spoken by about 95 million people worldwide, and is the official language of Germany, Austria and parts of Switzerland.English and German both belong to the Germanic branch of the Indo-Europeanlanguage family. Because they are so closely related, they share many features.
Furthermore, unlike Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Russian, or Arabic, there is<span> no new alphabet to learn, </span>only a few letters to add. If you already know Latin script (and if you do not, I am incredibly amazed you have been following the article this far) the only new arrivals will be the umlauts ä, ö and ü as well as <span>ß </span>which is just a fancy German s.
That isn't even the best part. German and Indo-Aryan languages share a lot of common grammatical structures and nearly the same word order. So it would definitely not be a Herculean task to establish a command over the language!