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  1. 3rd Grade Writing
  2. Unlock Word Meanings with Prefixes and Suffixes

3RD GRADE WRITING • WRITING & LANGUAGE

Unlock Word Meanings with Prefixes and Suffixes

Learn how word parts can help you figure out what new words mean!

SECTION 1

How People Started Building Words

Long ago, people needed ways to make new words. They discovered something amazing: they could take word parts and put them together like building blocks! This helped them create thousands of new words without having to make up completely new sounds.

Ancient Times
First Word Parts
People in Greece and Rome started using prefixes (parts at the beginning) and suffixes (parts at the end) to make new words.
Middle Ages
Word Building Spreads
As people traveled and traded, they shared their word-building tricks. English borrowed many word parts from other languages.
1500s
English Gets Creative
English speakers became word-building experts! They used prefixes like un- and suffixes like -ful to create thousands of new words.
Today
Word Parts Everywhere
We still use these same word parts every day! Learning them helps us understand new words we've never seen before.

Today, knowing about prefixes and suffixes is like having a secret code to unlock the meaning of new words. When you see a word you don't know, you can look for these word parts to help figure out what it means!

SECTION 2

The Three Parts of Words

Words are like sandwiches! They can have three main parts that work together to create meaning. Let's learn about each part and how they help us understand what words mean.

1

Root Words

The main part of a word that has the basic meaning. Like play in the word playing. It's the heart of the word!
2

Prefixes

Word parts that go at the beginning to change the meaning. Like un- in unhappy. They're like magic word changers!
3

Suffixes

Word parts that go at the end to change the meaning. Like -ful in helpful. They add extra meaning to the end!
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of words like toy trains! The main train car is the root word. You can add cars at the front (prefixes) and at the back (suffixes) to make your word train longer and give it new meanings!
SECTION 3

See How Word Parts Work Together

Word Building Example: "UNHELPFUL"UN-HELP-FULPREFIXmeans "not"ROOT WORDmeans "to assist"SUFFIXmeans "full of"UNHELPFUL = "not full of help"More ExamplesRE-READ-INGREREADING = "reading again"PRE-heat-EDPREHEATED = "heated before"care-LESSCARELESS = "without care"teach-ERTEACHER = "one who teaches"
This diagram shows how prefixes (beginning parts), root words (main parts), and suffixes (ending parts) work together to create new words with different meanings.

When you see a new word, try to break it apart like a puzzle! Look for prefixes at the beginning that might change the meaning, find the root word in the middle that gives the main idea, and check for suffixes at the end that add extra meaning. This word detective work will help you understand what the word means!

SECTION 4

How Word Building Rules Work

Just like building with blocks, there are simple rules for putting word parts together. These rules help us build words that make sense and sound right!

The Word Building Formula

WORD BUILDING PATTERN
PREFIX + ROOT WORD + SUFFIX = NEW WORD
You don't always need all three parts! Sometimes you just use root + suffix (like play + ful = playful) or prefix + root (like un + happy = unhappy).

Important Word Building Rules

  1. Prefixes attach to the front: un- + happy = unhappy
  2. Suffixes attach to the end: help + -ful = helpful
  3. The root word stays in the middle: It's the main part that doesn't move!
  4. Sometimes letters change: happy + -ness = happiness (y changes to i)
Word Building Steps1Step 1: Find the Root WordLook for the main part that has the basic meaningExample: In "unhelpful" the root is "help"2Step 2: Look for PrefixesCheck if there's a word part at the beginningExample: "un-" means "not" so "unhelp" means "not help"3Step 3: Look for SuffixesCheck if there's a word part at the endExample: "-ful" means "full of" so "helpful" means "full of help"4Step 4: Put the Meanings TogetherCombine all the parts to understand the whole wordExample: "unhelpful" = "not full of help" = not helpful
Follow these four simple steps to break apart any word and figure out what it means by looking at its root word, prefixes, and suffixes.
SECTION 5

The Most Helpful Word Parts to Know

Learning some common prefixes and suffixes is like learning the most useful tools in a toolbox! These word parts show up in hundreds of different words.

Common Prefixes
PrefixMeaningExamples
un-not, opposite ofunhappy, unlock, unfold
re-again, backreplay, return, rebuild
pre-beforepreview, preheat, prepay
dis-not, oppositedislike, disagree, disappear
Common Suffixes
SuffixMeaningExamples
-fulfull ofhelpful, careful, playful
-lesswithouthelpless, careless, hopeless
-erone whoteacher, player, helper
-ingdoing nowrunning, playing, reading
-eddid beforeplayed, helped, jumped
💡 MEMORY TIP
Think of prefixes and suffixes like clothing for words! A prefix is like a hat that goes on top (at the beginning), and a suffix is like shoes that go at the bottom (at the end). They dress up the root word and change how it looks and acts!
SECTION 6

Breaking Down a Tricky Word Step by Step

Let's practice being word detectives! We'll break down a big word to figure out what it means, step by step.

Breaking Down "DISAGREEABLE"

Step 1 — Look at the Whole Word

The word is "disagreeable". It looks long and tricky, but we can break it into parts! Let's see what parts we can find.
Word to solve: disagreeable

Step 2 — Find the Root Word

Let's look for the main part in the middle. I can see the word "agree" hiding in there! Agree means to think the same way as someone else.
Root word: agree = to think the same way

Step 3 — Look for Prefixes

What comes before "agree"? I see "dis-" at the beginning! Remember, "dis-" means "not" or "opposite."
Prefix: dis- = not or opposite

Step 4 — Look for Suffixes

What comes after "agree"? I see "-able" at the end! The suffix "-able" means "able to be" or "can be."
Suffix: -able = able to be

Step 5 — Put It All Together

Now let's combine the meanings: dis- + agree + -able = "not able to agree" or "not agreeable." So disagreeable describes someone who is hard to get along with!
Final meaning: disagreeable = hard to get along with
SECTION 7

Smart Ways to Remember Word Parts

Here are some helpful tricks and tips to help you remember common word parts and become an even better word detective!

Memory TrickWord PartHow to Remember
Picture Storiesun- = notThink of unzipping a jacket - you're NOT zipped anymore!
Sound Cluesre- = again"Re" sounds like "redo" - doing something again!
Opposite Pairs-ful vs -lessFull means has lots, less means has none - they're opposites!
Word Families-er = one whoThink of job words: teacher, player, worker
🔍 DETECTIVE TIP
When you find a new word, try covering up the prefix or suffix with your finger! This helps you see the root word more clearly. Then uncover the word parts one at a time to build the full meaning!
⭐ WORD BUILDING SUPERPOWER
Learning word parts is like getting x-ray vision for reading! Instead of getting stuck on big words, you can see through them to understand what they mean. The more word parts you learn, the more reading superpowers you get!
SECTION 8

Ready for Bigger Word Challenges

Now that you know the basics, you're ready to tackle bigger challenges! Some words have more than one prefix or suffix, and some word parts come from other languages.

Basic LevelAdvanced LevelWhat's Different
helpful (help + ful)unhelpfulness (un + help + ful + ness)More word parts stacked together!
player (play + er)prehistoric (pre + histor + ic)Root words from other languages (Greek/Latin)
remake (re + make)autobiography (auto + bio + graph + y)Multiple root words combined!

Don't worry if advanced words look scary at first! You already have the detective skills you need. Just break them down piece by piece, and look up word parts you don't know yet. Every word detective started exactly where you are now!

🚀 NEXT STEPS
As you keep reading and learning, you'll discover word parts from around the world! Many English words use parts from Greek (like tele- meaning far) and Latin (like aqua- meaning water). Learning these will make you a word expert!
SECTION 9

Practice Your Word Detective Skills

Time to practice being a word detective! Use what you've learned about prefixes, root words, and suffixes to solve these word puzzles.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Look at the word "replay". What are the two parts of this word, and what do they mean?
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
What word do you get when you combine: care + ful? What does this new word mean?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Break down the word "unfriendly" into its three parts. What does each part mean, and what does the whole word mean?
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
You're reading a story and see the word "prehistoric". You know that "pre-" means "before" and "historic" relates to history. What do you think this word means?
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Create your own word using the prefix "re-", a root word of your choice, and the suffix "-able". Explain what your word means and give an example of how to use it.
SUMMARY

Your Word Detective Toolkit

You now have amazing word detective powers! Remember that words are made of parts: prefixes at the beginning (like un-, re-, pre-), root words in the middle (like play, help, care), and suffixes at the end (like -ful, -less, -er). When you see a new word, break it apart like a puzzle to figure out what it means!

Use your four-step detective method: find the root word, look for prefixes, check for suffixes, then put all the meanings together. The more you practice, the easier it becomes to unlock the meanings of words you've never seen before. You're now ready to read bigger books and understand more words than ever before!

Varsity Tutors • 3rd Grade Writing • Unlock Word Meanings with Prefixes and Suffixes