<span>The Answer is Sol-leks</span>
Answer:
A perfectionist is someone who aims for "perfection". They want to become as flawless as they can be. Being flawless and perfect is the ideal type of being a perfectionist. People who want to be perfect strive to become the definition of perfection. They are also heavily concerned by other people's evaluation about themselves, giving them the thought process of 'needing' to be perfect. They fear judgement and disapproval from others. Perfectionists have also dealt with the probability of having high expectations in their early years, putting pressure on them.
Hope this helps!
<span>Words of the same root with different affixes are well
thought-out different words, so in that regard it would follow that there would
be more words. But if you mean there might be a capability to change an
existing word simply and clearly put off or negate people inventing entirely
new words, root and all? In that circumstance, especially considering each
modification of a root is in theory a separate word, there would be no much
impact; all words have to start from somewhere.</span>
Yes your motive is clear and you used a choice of words.
Good Luck!