-e-

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English

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Etymology

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The final vowel of hamster, as the initial vowel would be a homonym of -a- from rat.

Infix

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-e-

  1. (pharmacology) a monoclonal antibody derived from a hamster source
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  • -mab is the base suffix common to all monoclonal antibodies. (See that entry for full paradigm.)

References

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  • USP Dictionary of USAN and International Drug Names, U.S. Pharmacopeia, 2000

Danish

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. An interfix inserted in some compounds.

Derived terms

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See also

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Dutch

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Etymology

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Originally often represented a thematic vowel or a (genitive) case ending; also sometimes added simply for ease of pronunciation. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Interfix

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-e-

  1. a linking vowel added in compound words
    willekeur
    Koninginnedag

Derived terms

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Finnish

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Etymology

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From Proto-Finnic *-dë-.

Interfix

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-e-

  1. The second infinitive marker.

Usage notes

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  • In the active, attaches to the same stem as the first infinitive (by replacing the final -a or ). In the passive, attaches to the strong passive stem (same as the passive conditional without the final -isiin) and does not replace the final -a or .
  • Always followed by a case marker: in standard Finnish, either the inessive or the instructive case (the latter for active only).

German

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. used to link elements in some compounds

Derived terms

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Hungarian

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Pronunciation

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. A suffix-initial vowel (or linking vowel) inserted interconsonantally between the word stem and the suffix, to ease pronunciation, without contributing to the meaning.
    öreg (old) + ‎-e- + -bb → ‎öregebb (older)

See also

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Northern Kurdish

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. used to link elements in some compounds:
pîrejin (pîr-e-jin, 'an old woman')
kurteçîrok (kurt-e-çîrok, 'a short story')

Derived terms

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Norwegian Bokmål

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. A morph interjected between word roots to give pronunciation a better sense of flow, but which gives no change in meaning.

Derived terms

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Norwegian Nynorsk

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Alternative forms

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  • -ar- (in older standards when the first element is strong feminine)
  • -a-

Etymology

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From the Old Norse genitive plural ending, -a, such as in manna mál (> mannemål). Also from the strong feminine genitive singular, -ar, whence also -ar- and -a-.

Interfix

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-e-

  1. Genitival interfix indicating that the former element is a characteristic of the latter.
    hest (horse) + ‎hov (hoof) → ‎hestehov (horse’s hoof)

Usage notes

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This interfix is often used in compounds where the first element is plural, as opposed to singular -s-. Example: gudetru (polytheism, belief in gods) and gudstru (monotheism, belief in a god).

Derived terms

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Saterland Frisian

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Etymology

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Akin to German -n-/-e-, Dutch -en-/-e- and Swedish -e-.

Pronunciation

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. Genitival interfix indicating that the former element is a characteristic of the latter.
    Múus (mouse) + ‎Buk (male animal) → ‎Muzebuk (male mouse)

Derived terms

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Swedish

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Pronunciation

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Interfix

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-e-

  1. Interfix used to link elements in some compounds

Usage notes

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  • The interfix -e- is sometimes used in compounds where the first element ends in -a:
  • It is also used in some compounds ending in a consonant, e.g. natt (night)nattetid ((during) nighttime); skörd (harvest)skördetröska (combine harvester); tjänst (service)tjänsteman (civil servant); tid (time)tideräkning (chronology).
  • In some cases, -e- is found in more literary or archaic compounds, but not otherwise, e.g. stjärna (star)stjärnevalv (stellar vault), cf. stjärnkikare (astronomical telescope)
  • The interfix -e- is also more common in southern and western dialects, and thus in compounds derived from those dialects, cf. -a-, e.g. spettekaka (skewer cake), pilevall (avenue of willow trees).

Derived terms

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See also

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References

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  • Teleman, Ulf; Hellberg, Staffan; Andersson, Erik & Holm, Lisa (1999). Svenska akademiens grammatik 2 Ord. Stockholm: Svenska akad.
  • Wessén, Elias (1958). Svensk språkhistoria. 2, Ordbildningslära. 3. ed. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell